Today in the Batt Athletic fee notes p. 2 Bus route changes p. 5 tJT holds A&M p. 8 Che Battalion Weather Fair and mild Wednesday. Part ly cloudy Thursday. Today's high 72°. Tomorrow’s high 73°. Vol. 67 No. 339 College Station, Texas Wednesday, January 30, 1974 d s 0 >1 > NOTHING UNDERNEATH the masking tape John Hollaway is pulling off Sbisa Hall. He and fellow-worker Peter Adams are merely patching leaks, from a 12-foot high scaffold, in the old building. The masking tape is applied to bricks prior to caulking. (Photo by Gary Baldasari) MSC grass use inHonse’posit Personal choice Teague to run for 16th term lain Local Congressman Olin E. ’eague has announced that he will run for re-election to the Sixth Congressional District. ^ I Teague was elected to the 79th J [Congress and has served ever :«ince. ? Teague assumed the chairman ship of the Science and Astronau tics Committee with the advent of the 93rd Congress. Under the rules of the House of Representa tives Teague had to give up the irmanship of the Veterans Af fairs Committee, however, he re- . mains on that committee as its A H ra ^ n ^ member and is chairman ^ of the Subcommittee for Pensions and Compensations. T e a g u e's ! other duties in the House include the powerful chairmanship of the Democratic Caucus. The caucus | chairman is included in the lead ership of the House and it makes im! Teague their representative on the National Democratic Commit- idemiC |v Teague serves on the House ! Committee for Standards of Offi cial Conduct and is a member of course 1°^ House and Senate’s Technology Assessment Board. I “I am presently focusing my ef- dies | forts towards the passage of a solar-energy bill that should help in solving the long range energy I crisis,” Teague said. University National Bank "On the side of Texas AAM.” Adr. Long-standing tradition knelt before the altar of inevitable change last night as the Memorial Student Center Executive Committee voted to leave use of the grass around the MSC up to individual discretion. The MSC grounds had previously been considered a memorial to Aggie war dead and use of the grass, or even walking across it, was forbidden by policy. Adherence to that policy had become noticeably less strict in recent years. The decision may have gone against overwhelming student opinion. Randy Ross, Senate representative, said, “The Student Senate talked about this last semester and 95 percent were ^n favor of memorializing the grounds, with the underlying factor of not walking on the grass understood.” Professor Robert Rucker, landscape architect, said, “There shouldn’t be grass that students can’t walk on around campus anyway.” After lengthy debate, the committee voted 11-3 to open the grounds to use. Currently much of the grounds is torn up by construction in the area. IN A CLOSED SESSION later, the committee dismissed Arts Committee Chairperson La Tonya Perrin from her position. Perrin was attacked for not handling her programs, mostly films, through H. W. Gaines, MSC coordinator of programming. Detractors charged this lack of communication led to poor publicity and a lack of information to the proper outlets. Perrin told The Battalion she found out the meeting would consider such allegations less than an hour before the meeting began. She was dismissed by a 12-0 vote, with Don Webb, MSC president, abstaining. In other action, the committee: APPROVED THREE SPEAKERS for Great Issues. Joachim Schelien, a German journalist, will speak on European-American affairs Feb. 7; John J. McKetta and Thomas Halbouty will give opposing views on the energy crisis in the noon lecture series. William Kuntsler, the controversial lawyer whose scheduled SCONA appearance has been canceled, was suggested as a speaker. GI chairperson John Hoover said Kuntsler had been rejected as a choice before SCONA invited him. VOTED TO UNDERWRITE the Spring Leadership Trip against the wishes of student members of the committee. The trip will expose student leaders ahd four students from each college to a metropolitan city’s entertainment at a minimum cost. Participants pay $30 for a $125 weekend. President to be subpoenaed in California burglary trial LOS ANGELES