Atlantic City, j fleeting ruin et. 16, Come by test dri ' otar yengiV r °ni campus, ’ e all Japaiitj Che Battalion Do Not Pass A Temptation Lightly By, It May Never Come Again. Vol. 67 No. 225 College Station, Texas Friday, March 2, 1973 FRIDAY — Considerable late night & morning fog. Partly cloudy & warm. High 77, low 57. SATURDAY — Partly cloudy & warm. High of 79. 845-2226 Concerns Levying Of Hospital Fees/ Student Senate Supports State Bill E CALIGULA DECLARES A FAMINE in Rome in this icene from the Aggie Players presentation of “Caligula.” fbe play is being presented at A&M Consolidated auditor- um and will conclude its run Saturday night at 8 p. m. Emission is $1. (Photo by Steve Krauss) Student Senators endorsed the basic theme of the Texas Bill concerning the separate levying of hospital fees in a roll call vote of 39 to 15 Thursday night. The bill, presently before the State Legislature, would author ize the A&M Board of Directors to levy a hospital fee separate from the Student Services fees if it is passed. “The original purpose of the separation of the fees was to allow more flexibility with the Student Services fees,” said Ross. “A&M has always charged the $30 maximum Student Service Fee allowed by the state, yet this separation of fees would decrease the Student Service in proportion to the hospital fee.” “The bill needs to be amended,” said Virginia Ehrlich, treasurer. Filing For Student Posts Ends Monday Filing for student positions closes Monday at 5 p. m. persons interested in runnings for the Student Government, Residence Hall Association, class officer or yell leader positions should file in the Student Government office in the Memorial Student Center. RVs Going To Mardi Gras The A&M Ross Volunteer Com- lany leaves this weekend for lew Orleans to provide the hon- rguard for Rex, King of Mardi Iras, in his Tuesday parade dur- ng the festive annual celebration. The RVs will form 120 strong lehind Commander William D. falker of Dallas as the first unit n the parade. They will be pre- eded only by King Rex. Thrity seniors and 90 juniors fill make the four-day trip, ac- ording to Col. Thomas R. Bar ons, commandant. The company fill billet aboard the U.S.S. Nash- ilie, a Navy ship docked just off lanal Street in New Orleans. A Monday reception and buffet ponsored by the New Orleans Club for Ross Volunteers md their dates will be among :adet activities. The Tuesday )arade will start at 9 a.m. and md at 1 p.m. The RV Company’s participa- fion in the Mardi Gras parade is longstanding custom. An elite |ionor military unit composed of seniors and juniors in the Corps >f Cadets, the Ross Volunteers dso form the traditional honor buard for the inauguration of the Texas governor. The unit is the >ldest student organization in Texas. Sponsors of the company this year and accompanying the RVs are Air Force Lt. Col. Roscoe P. Thorpe and Army Capt. Mario Macaluso. The colorful Louisiana carnival, called “the greatest free show on earth,” consists of expensive, glamorous private balls and a variety of street parades. The city dating back to the early 1700s decorates with traditional colors of green, , yellow and pur ple during the Mardi Gras sea son, which coincides with the European custom. Mardi Gras literally means “Fat Tuesday,” the day before Ash Wednesday when the Lenten fasting season begins. The term is usually applied to the two weeks before Shrove Tuesday. “The present hospital bill is one- half million dollars and going up all the time. There is nothing in the bill to stop them from dip ping back into student services fees when they need the extra money. “An amendment should be made to stop them under any condition from using the Student Services fees.” The resolution, in ainended form, reads as follows: “Be it re solved that the Student Senate hereby supports the separate levying of hospital fees as pro posed by the legislative bill, if and only if the state legislature amends the bill to preclude the use of any Student Services fees for the new health center. “And, that the Student Senate requests that it be consulted prior to any efforts to increase the Student Services fee above the amount of reduction due to this separation of fees. “Be it further resolved that the Student Senate requests that it be consulted prior to any efforts to increase the compulsory hos pital fee beyond the limits set in the bill.” In other action, senators ac cepted portions of part IV of the Student Life section of the Uni versity Rules and Regulations handbook. Proposed changes in the blue- book section include the deletion of the current policies concerning dress and grooming of students and faculty, cleanliness of a stu dent’s room, and allowing refrig erators and cooking appliances in designated rooms with approval. Debi Blackmon (off-campus- under-grad) presented a resolu tion for the establishment of an in-depth publication to inform the general campus of current student affairs. The publication would have a magazine format and would be published five times yearly with approximately 25 pages. The proposal also asks for the allocation of $7,205 from the Stu dent Services reserve fund for the 1972-73 year. The magazine would be divided into literary, student affairs and student advising sections. Under the last department would be such items as an economic col umn, letters, syndicated essayists and a legal adviser column. The Crisis And Referral Center Committee brought a resolution before the Senate asking the Sen ate to recommend that at least one full-time qualified psycholo gist be added to the staff of the University Counseling and Test ing Center beginning the fall semester of 1973. The Senate accepted the reso lution based on the following: The present half-time psycholo gist employed by the university had 828 students referred to her last year and that the money for the cost of this psychologist would come from the General Operating fund controlled by Vice President Tom Cherry. Senators endorsed the proposal presented by Darrell Baker (arch- at-large) to encourage the par ticipation of students during the week of March 19-24, which has been proclaimed as “Black Ex perience 3” by the Black Aware ness Committee, the Memorial Student Center and Texas A&M. The constitutional revisions presented to the senate last week were tabled 32 to 24 with two abstentions. The changes include wording and clarification prob lems. May Liberal Arts Grads Can Register Activities Liberal Arts Majors graduat ing this spring may now file a record of their activities in the Dean’s office of the College of Liberal Arts. The program, initiated by the Liberal Arts Student Council, will enable the Dean’s office to com pile a summary of every stu dent’s life as an undergraduate, according to William Wade, coun cil president. These lists will be used to bet ter facilitate the task of respond ing to inquiries from graduate schools, professional schools, fel lowship boards and employers concerning the background of particular A&M graduates in whom they have an interest. Participation in the program is strictly voluntary but is in the student’s self-interest, said Wade. Forms asking information about extracurricular activities, academic scholarships, employ ment experience, community ac tivities, career intentions and other information are available from department heads. Completed forms should be turned into the Dean’s Office in the College of Liberal Arts. 6 73- 6 74 Corps Heads Named C. Scott Eberhart of Dallas has been selected commander of the A&M 1973-74 Corps of Cadets. Eberhart will hold top rank next fall as cadet colonel of the corps. Melvin P. “Slim” Noack of Walburg will be second in com mand, as deputy commander, an nounced Col. Thomas R. Parsons, commandant. Seniors hold cadet officer rank in the corps, with noncommis sioned officers coming from the junior class. Eberhart and Noack will suc ceed the 1972-73 corps command er, Ronald L. Krnavek of Corpus Christi, and deputy commander Wade F. Seidel of Brenham at the May 5 Final Review. All new cadet officers will be sworn in at Abortion Is Now A Moral Issue,/ Claims Rep. Weddington Thursday! Women no longer have to ques tion the legality of abortion but must make an individual moral choice, Texas Rep. Sarah Wed dington said Thursday. She does not believe the Jan. 22, 1973, U. S. Supreme Court ruling that Texas anti-abortion law was unconstitutional will “turn the state into an abortion mill, such as New York. “Procedures of abortion are be coming available,” Rep. Wed dington informed a Political For um audience at A&M, “and the matter now rests where it should, with the individual.” She said recently submitted bills to allow 16-year-old girls to get medical treatment for pre vention of pregnancy is “in great trouble. I doubt if it will go through this legislature.” “It does appear 18-year-olds will get full legal rights former ly accorded 21-year-olds, includ ing the right without parent con sent to have an abortion,” she said. “The basic principle of the Supreme Court ruling is simply that whether or not a woman continues a pregnancy is up to the woman.” The Austin representative, first woman elected to the Texas Legislature from Travis County, argued the case before the court. Texas and Georgia statutes were ruled unconstitutional, she indicated, “because they consist ed of deprivation of privacy. The finding did not deal with the question of human life before birth, because medical leaders cannot agree on it.” The state may, during the first three months of pregnancy, regu late who performs an abortion. Regulations during the second and third trimesters can be placed by the state only on facili ties and reasons for the life and health of the individual, respec tively, according to the Supreme Court ruling. Ms. Weddington pointed out that several indictments against doctors in Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma have been thrown out. Immediate use of abortion may be another matter, she stipulated, even though a doctor cannot now be prosecuted, as before, for per forming an abortion. “A doctor will be cautious,” she believes, “because he doesn’t know how; he may not feel tech nically competent. There is also a limited supply of proper equip ment.” The lawmaker said there is no law nor current case concerning a married woman having an abortion — or sterilization — without the husband’s consent. Hospitals usually seek the hus band’s consent, even in a case in which a woman was divorced and had not seen her husband for six years. “Only the girl herself decides if she will engage in a sexual act,” Ms. Weddington said. “It seems to me she should have the right to protect herself.” the start of fall semester classes. An Air Force ROTC cadet with a pilot category contract, Eber hart is corps sergeant major this year and a junior civil engineer ing major. Noack is the corps’ first Ma rine Corps officer candidate chos en for a top leadership position. He also is on the corps staff this year, as supply sergeant. Noack is studying agricultural educa tion. “With the Naval ROTC pro gram now in operation, Platoon Leaders Class (PL cadets in the Marine Corps program) will share in opportunities for leader ship positions,” Col. Parsons said. Commands have previously gone to Army and Air Force ROTC cadets. Eberhart and Noack were se lected “on the basis of their rec ords in the corps and scholar ship” from a top group of can didates, the commandant added. They received approval of Dean of Students James P. Hannigan and President Jack K. Williams. The junior cadets are both members of the Ross Volunteers, elite honor military unit. Noack, son of Mr. and Mrs. August No ack, Rt. 1, Georgetown, and a 1970 Georgetown High School graduate, also is the Collegiate FFA Chapter vice president and member of Alpha Zeta, Phi Eta Sigma, the Agricultural Student Council and Agricultural Advis ory Council. His father is a cen tral Texas farmer-rancher. Eberhart is a tw o-y ear AFROTC scholarship holder, member of the Student Senate, Wings and Sabers composed of military scholarship recipients and Town Hall. The 1970 W. T. White High School graduate’s fa ther is a Texas International Air lines pilot. Both cadets are Distinguished Students, with better than 3.3 grade point averages in the 4.0 system. IRS Changes Assistants ’ Tax Status Salaries of college and univer sity teaching assistants are no longer tax exempt, the Internal Revenue Service has ruled after making a test case of a Texas A&M graduate student serving in such a capacity. IRS District Director R. L. Phinney of Austin formally noti fied TAMU Graduate Dean George W. Kunze of the new in terpretation rendered by the fed eral agency’s Washington office. The test case involved a teach ing assistant in chemistry. Dean Kunze said the IRS . felt the strongest case could be made for a teaching assistant in that field. “Based on an old ruling, some teaching assistants were allowed in the past to exclude their in come,” Phinney noted, “but the current position is that the in come is taxable.” The IRS director also pointed out a large number of research assistants are receiving taxable income for research projects. “Generally, amounts paid for services pursuant to a contract between the university and the entity providing the funds are taxable to the student,” he ob served. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” Adv. Aggies Lobby On Capitol Hill By MIKE RICE Editor WASHINGTON D. C. — Texas A&M students attending the Na- lional Student Lobby’s Second Annual Conference had the oppor tunity to lobby among Congress men from across the nation while visiting Capitol Hill Thursday. Delegates Layne Kruse, Mike Rice, Barb Sears and Rochelle Lindsey highlighted lobbying ef forts with a one and one-half hour talk with Cong. Olin E. “Tiger” Teague (D-College Station). The delegates expressed their surprise afterwards that Teague wouldn’t comment on issues being lobbied for by the NSL such as economic conversion, air fare dis counts and higher education legis lation. Teague said he didn’t want to comment too much because these issues can still be changed tre mendously by the committees which they are in. The four said they were somewhat taken aback when Teague started the conver sation saying that students never think about where money comes from and the priorities on which it must be spent. “He seemed to fit the pattern of many politicians today,” com mented one delegate. “Most don’t seem to care any more about any thing and don’t seem to care whether they show this lack of concern to their constituents or not.” Teague said the money issue can’t be ignored. “People are wanting so much that we may have to initiate higher tax legis lation, although I’m not for high er taxes,” he said. Teague, chairman of the House Science and Astronautics Com mittee, added that he felt the nation’s space technology is ac countable for a large part of the U.S.’s economic growth. He said that reshuffling of funds and priorities alone would not solve the problem of the 34-billion dpl- lar deficit expected this year. He also projected that 20-million new jobs will be needed for Amer icans in the next 10 years. Kruse told Teague that Sen. Ted Kennedy’s bill for economic conversion would have a tremen dous impact on research pro- grams because more research dol lars are necessary to solve urban and mass transit problems, for example. The four also talked to Teague’s staff workers and aides before listening to one of Teague’s sub committee hearings on jet air craft noise reduction proposals. Three NASA astronauts, John Schweigert, Ron Evans and Gene Cernan, bumped into the four stu dents in Teague’s office to add an interesting departure note to the lobby venture. An early afternoon reception followed the activities with Teague, allowing the Aggies to discuss current issues and lobby with different congressmen from across the nation. Among comments from Con gressmen were included the thought that Congress has acted in an irresponsible manner with dollar allocations in the past and is now being forced to raise taxes to off-set its past over-spending. Cong. James Mann (D-S.C.) said current Nixon impoundments of funds are the fault of Con gress, but that Nixon’s actions were forcing the economy into a false recession, only delaying inflation. Mann was generally critical of the current priorities program, but noted that one-third of the gross national product from con sumers goes into governmental spending, “which is below many other countries’ tax percentage levels.” The four chatted briefly at mid afternoon with Cong. W. R. Doage (D-Waco) who was pressed with a committee meeting. A full day of lobbying activ ities was scheduled again for to day with the delegates slated to meet with Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Texas), Cong. Bill Archer (R- Houston) and an aide to the hos pitalized Texas Cong. Wright Patman. Buffet dinner in the Senate Caucus Room and a talk by Cong. Don Fraser (D-Monn) of the House Committee on Foreign Af fairs will wrap up the three-day conference tonight. Regional cau cuses will meet prior to the for eign affairs dinner to elect re gional representatives to the NSL Board of Directors for the coming year. Final Score In Elephant Bowl: Zip-to-Zip