ational Student Lobby meets at capital for log-rolling VICKIE ASHWILL ff Writer WASHINGTON, D.C.—An avalanche intr y gtudents descended on this city Sat- °f AAll'! jay to lobby for the nation’s newest 8 relay I k of voters, themselves, e Jones,fl|ver 900 delegates representing 45 dcGilvtjj threat j am. One* the natiti Harold J 1 Doug nise All in the ( will ten Adolph Tii make tit ssibility | ■ medley 440, Grsi 20 while 1 he mile, -est outi: pole viil; career ek. Defe v.d Petertl ow start, i : picture, sed the d ■st week i! art inasJ nm setij arb Sears, John Nash and Carol »re of the Student Government, and Speer and Vickie Ashwill, of The talion, are at the NSL Conference week for TAMU. ;es are attending the National Stu- Lobby’s third annual conference this week. Conference activities began Saturday at the downtown Ramada Inn in a scur ry of confusion. More delegates showed up than were expected, and no rooms were available for them. Students have had to double up in rooms and form long lines for room and conference reg istration. Ten students, from TAMU, Texas Tech University, the University of Tex as and Texas Women’s University, are representing all Texas universities and secondary schools at the conference. Willis Edwards, chairman for the 1973-74 NSL board of directors, said students were here to lobby for educa tional issues and to take needed funds back to campuses, in his welcoming re marks to the delegations. “We know that what happens here in Washington, D.C., on Capitol Hill and in the White House affects our lives daily,” said Edwards. “NSL has been and will continue to be effective in Congress. NSL seeks to make you (the students) very well-known.” First priority issue in NSL for the coming year include abolition of the “means test”, which bans students from families with more than $20,000 ad justed income from getting Guaranteed Student Loans; an increase of college work-study funds up to $420 million authorized level without depleting the funding for other student assistance programs; and the maintenance of low or no tuition at public two-year and four-year colleges. NSL also lists stand-by discount fares on air, bus and train transporta tion for persons over 65 and under 22 years old and the concept of full mini- \ mum-wage for students among its priorities. and youth Major speakers during the first three days of the conference noted a feeling of apathy among students nationwide. These speakers included Rep. Paul Mc- Closky (R-Calif.), Bob Woodward of the Washington Post, CBS White House correspondent Dan Rather, Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.) and Heather Booth, director of the Midwest Acad emy, Inc. a school for organizing stu dents into groups for social reform. McClosky said students were facing a challenge in order to get rid of the apathy and despair. “Most congressmen hope students never will learn because they are the most numerous, cohesive group in America,” said McClosky. “There seem ingly has been a reluctance on the part of students to organize. Apathy on col lege campuses is probably greater now than it ever has been.” Rather said than even with the 18- year-old vote most students did not do anything in the 1972 election to make any great difference. (See STUDENTS, p. 4) Che Battalion Secret meeting Charles Powell, dean of men, met with Vol. 67 No. 354 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 26, 1974 I a group of suspected streakers in a tv room £: g: of the Krueger-Dunn Commons Monday night, ij:- No details of the meeting have been jx released. Streaking is the practice of nude running. x ; It has recently become a fad on campuses :•:! :$ across Texas. 11 univett meet wilt og at 12:8 |i\Vhat to expect from Roy Clark more than a standing guitar yer by definition offers. g event! si M. Sdll 5T HOM;'! C ) Better TRIVIA" DCK! KTSWfiX EkUIONTH; 'ION PENNAtf WEI6HT?' £ K HEAR MA? uitar player oy Clark ere Friday illed as a total entertainer, ark will be in G. Rollie White JT Or THc NALOcixJW l' seum Friday at 7:30 p. m. kets are on sale in the Rud- Center Box Office. tie plays, he sings, he clowns mnd: Roy Clark apparently dws what he is about as an en- tainer and according to his ress release” this accounts in rt for the continued high rai ls of the television show “Hee iw.” Musically Clark has been de- loping skills on an assortment guitars, brass instruments, as 11 as piano and drums since t 14. His recordings of “Yes- day when I was Young,” “Come re With Me,” and recently lank God and Greyhound,” fe been best sellers for Dot ords. The Academy of Country d Western Music voted Clark tertainer of the Year, their ;hest award, for 1973. General admission for Aggies th activity cards is free, for irk’s show, and persons who found in other situations pay raey to get in. '■—Ls -On University National Bank the side of Texas A&M." SOMERSET MAUGHAM’S story came to life Monday night as “Rain” opened at the University Center Forum. Kent Brown, as Pvt. Hodgson, seems to be contemplating Aileen Wenck, as ex-prostitute Sadie Thompson, in a scene from the modern tragedy. “Rain” plays for $1 at 8 p. m. every night through Saturday. (Photo by Kathy Curtis) ouse leader predicts spring Nixon resignation * *' CAMBRIDGE, Mass.

— Rep. lomas P. O’Neill Jr., D-Mass., said otiday he thinks President Nixon will sign in April or May. “Prom what I've seen, the evidence is |ry damaging,” O’Neill told students at [arvard University’s John F. Kennedy fstitute of Politics. Later, Gary Hymel, an O’Neill aide Washington, said O’Neill called “com- [etely and absolutely false” the report his prediction of Nixon’s resignation (id possible indictment. O’Neill said earlier at Harvard that Jatergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski luld have sought the indictment of the President. But O’Neill said he is glad Jaworski didn’t try to do so. “I’d hate to see the President of the United States indicted,” said O’Neill, blouse majority leader. O’Neill said at Harvard he expects Judge John Sirica to transfer the evi dence on the President to the House Judiciary Committee. Once that happens, in April or May, “rather than see the evidence made public, I think the Presi dent will resign,” O’Neill said. He said he thinks Vice President Gerald Ford as president would “give stability to the country” and that he would be hard to beat in the presidential election of 1976. ACTOR’S VIEW of the new 2,500-seat auditorium looks out upon at seems to be an endless sea of empty seats. The stage is 130 feet eand 52 feet deep; a 13 by 60 feet platform in front of the stage serves ■ Kalmbach pleads guilty in Watergate follies WASHINGTON )—Herbert W. Kalmbach, a corporation lawyer who handled President Nixon’s personal legal affairs, pleaded guilty Monday to two charges stemming from his politi- • il fund-raising in 1970. One count was a technical violation of the Federal Corrupt Practices Act. The other accused Kalmbach of promising an ambasador a better post in return for a $100,000 contribution. Kalmbach could be sentenced to a maximum 3 years and $11,000 on the two charges. In return for the guilty pleas and Kalmbach’s pledge to testify against others, the government promised not to prosecute him in the Watergate coverup or in future political contributions cases. The 52-year-old Kalmbach admitted to the Senate Watergate Committee last year that he raised $220,000 that was then passed to the de fendants in the Watergate break-in. But he denied any knowledge that the money was to buy the conspirators’ silence. Kalmbach lives in Newport Beach, Calif., and practices law there and in Los Angeles. He told reporters he still performs legal work for the President. The White House said Kalmbach’s firm “continues to do some work on the Presi dent’s tax matters,” but would not discuss Kalm bach’s personal role. The charges to which he pleaded concern fund raising activities in 1970 when Republicans were making a major effort to elect GOP senators and representatives. Assistant Special Watergate Prosecutor Charles Ruff told in court about a committee, established in March 1970 by three members of the staff of the President, to raise and distribute campaign funds. Ruff said Kalmbach raised $2.8 million in pledges for the committee out of a total $3.9 million distributed “for the purpose of influ encing the election of candidates of the Republi can Party” in 19 states. One count against Kalmbach, a felony carry ing a maximum two year prison term and $10,000 fine, charges he worked for the committee which was operating without an elected chairman and treasurer as required by law at the time. The committee referred to apparently was a once-secret fund-raising effort called “Operation (See KLAMBACH, p. 4) MSC talks Beginnings of TAMU about control of programs linked to Corps’ story By WILL ANDERSON This is the first of a four part history of the Corps of Cadets. The Batt will focus this week on the Corps in recognition of Mili tary Weekend.—Ed. The histories of Texas A&M and the Corps are actually one common tale; they are insepa rable. When the act that established the college, the Morrill Act, was passed in 1861, Texas as a state of the Confederacy was not under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Con gress. It was ratified by the state in 1866 and construction began on the college in 1875. The presidency—originally of fered to the former president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, who refused it—was accepted by Thomas Gathright. When the college finally opened Oct. 4, 1876, many Texans voic ed a fear it would be the begin ning of a military aristocracy. Only 40 students appeared for the opening day but the number had grown to 106 by the end of the year. The college consisted of Old Main, the first building which was on the site of the Academic Building, Gathright Hall, a com bination dorm and mess hall and five professors’ homes. The school was a community in itself because of its isolation. The military began its influence early at A&M since many of the instructors were soldiers of the Confederacy and the cadet uni form was the traditional gray. Living conditions were so rough that in its early years its main use was as a reform school. The Corps began to form in 1887 when the Scott Rifles, fore- (See TAMU, p. 3) Today Streakers speak out p. 2 Hearst food plan p. 3 Elephant Bowl p. 5 Ags sweep 4 p. 6 Weather Continued fair and cool Tuesday. Maximum tem perature today in the low 60’s. Tonight’s low 40°. Partly cloudy to cloudy and turning warmer Wednesday. Wednesday’s high should be in the low er 70’s. Control of programming was the basic argu ment during the Memorial Student Center Execu tive Committee meeting Monday evening. Ultimate judgment of what is proper for the students to see became the axis of a new sug gested policy for film selection and review. Tim Manning, art films series chairman, pre sented information about his sub-committee’s budget and structure to demonstrate the legiti macy and trustworthiness of his committee’s choices of films. Earlier, LaTonya Perrin had been dismissed from her position as Arts Committee chairman because of an alleged inability to communicate this information. The Executive Committee will now be faced with the question of criteria on selecting a suit able and representative film, if their recommen dation is accepted. The resolution suggests the Student Program coordinator (Hal Gaines) order those films he has no objection to and send those questionable back to the chairman, rejected. The chairman can appeal this decision to the Executive Com mittee with film descriptions and other pertinent information. If the executives find the film unsuitable, the rejection can be appealed to the Council. Manning proposed a slightly different resolu tion putting no review boards above the com mittee, but Bill Davis, president-elect of the Council, disagreed. “We cannot self-legislate the ultimate decision making duty of the Exec Committee out of existence. A certain amount of control must be had, so that if a committee gets into trouble, we can defend it.” New auditorium one of the best By VICKIE ASHWILL “In the center of Texas, at the very heart of the 5,200 acre Texas A&M University campus, is a unique place—a complex called the University Cen ter,” reads an architect’s pamphlet. It is within this center that one of the best auditoriums in Texas, if not in the southwest, is located, said Steve Hodge, technical manager of thee theatre complex. Designed by Jarvis Putty Jarvis Inc. of Dallas, the 2,500-seat auditorium in the Rudder Center Theatre Complex is surrounded by an exhibit hall, a 750 seat theatre and a 250 seat forum. “It’s a very good hall,” continued Hodge. “It is the best equipped in Texas and in many respects unique.” Hodge said they added “reverb” electronically with speakers but did not want to make an issue of the acoustics in the hall. (See RUDDER CENTER, p. 3) M. — ’ /1 ] \u\v ?r> ■' J I t J } j s * 1 .* ; * J *. ’ . - 4 .-- , , a. '4- , ' fk 'W* ■" ? ■ ' “ ' — as an elevator to the storage area, the orchestra pit or a stage apron. The facility was modeled after Jones Hall in Houston, and is considered one of the best auditoriums in the southwest. (Photos by Gary Baldasari) oter registration Tuesday, Wednesday at MSC, library, Commons, Sbisa