Muster: Living tradition ith Schli He rds in (Ik king out 1 is in ai vo fine e another 1 ss. Wit] g suspei t a stronji have rei itatementil ensionotl not aid that ih •&M thet diat any ng, Hi Williai :>ng with animates Kelley. es are: Shifton nd Ray Vogt, ass and ankWes® The Corps of Cadets were fortunate to have lovely Scott; o® ladies pin flowers upon their uniforms. The flower tan pinning ceremony was the first event of Sunday’s • longM activities. (See related stories, more photos. Page 4.) ihris )rmer lover blamed By MARY ATICE WOODHAMS Tomorrow at 5:30 p.m., students will gather here at G. Rollie White Coliseum in the annual tradition of Muster,to honor Aggies who ha\ e died during the past year. Muster is held on San Jacinto Day any where in the world where two or more Aggies meet to remember those who hav e passed away. This year, more than 350 gatherings will occur from Indonesia to Germany, but the largest Muster is always held at A&M. Charles G. Scruggs, v ice-president and editorial director of Progressive Farmer Magazine and an A&M graduate, will be the main speaker at the ceremonies. Auld Lang Syne, sung by the Singing Cadets, a 21-gun salute fired by the Ross Volunteers, the “roll call for the absent and Silver Taps characterize the campus Muster. When the mames of the honored dead are called from the Muster Roll, a friend of the deceased answers "Here”. This year s campus Muster honors 43 stu dents, iormer students and professors of A&M, said Muster chairman Fred McClure. Several speakers from the campus will visit cities throughout Texas for the Cen tennial Muster, including Dr. Jack K. Williams, Drs. Tom and Carolyn Adair, Col. Thomas Parsons, Congressman Olin E. Teague, Dr. John Koldus, and Roger Miller. Muster was first recalled in 18S3, when Aggies met on June 26 to “live ov er again our college days, the v ictories and defeats won and lost upon drill ground and class room . Let every alumni answer at roll call, wrote the former students, then known as ex-cadets. These early meetings were par ties and banquets relating to the com- meneement activ ities. By the late 1-S90's, the Corps made an nual visits to the Sail Jacinto battlefield near Houston to participate in sham battles and maneuv ers, followed by a parade on Houston's Main Street. In the early 1900s, a Track and Field Day, a series of competitive athletic ev ents similar to intramurals, was held every April 21. When the events were called off in 1903, a “determined student body, 300 strong, marched in orderly military preci sion to the home of President Davis F. Houston to insist upon some observ ance of the anniv ersary of the battle that won Texas Independence. April 21 marks the day Sam Houston s small band of volun teers defeated Santa Anna s troops, freeing Texas from Mexican rule in 1836. During World War I, groups of Aggies met in foxholes all over Europe, and at Army posts in America but no musters were held on campus. In 1923, the former students prov ided Aggies with an opportunity to “meet old friends again and live over the old days at College Station" by planning a state and nationwide rally of former students. WTAW radio station broadcast a program consisting of a medley of A&M songs, greetings from the Brazos Country A&M Club, words from athletic coach D.X. Bi ble, and Aggie yells by the cadets. "11 there is an A&M man in one hundred miles of you, you are expected to get to-- gether, eat a little, and live over the days you spent at the A&M College of Texas," urged the March, 1923 Texas Aggie. By 1929 meetings had become interna tional, and the roll call of the absent mem bers came into practice. In 1942, A&M Muster gained national recognition when it was held at Corregidor Island in the Philippines. Fifteen days be fore the fall of the island, 25 men, led by General George Moore, 08, “mustered in the dim recesses of the Rock amd answered ‘here’ for their dead classmates.” Wartime brought Aggies together in al most every area of the world, and two men were reported to have held Muster in a submarine. hi 1943, E.E. McQuillen, then director of the Association of Former Students, sent out “muster packets to Aggies throughout the country. Filled with information on A&M heritage and the tradition of Muster, these packets also listed the names of the area’s deceased Aggies. The first campus Muster was held in 1946 at Kyle Field — the “Homecoming Muster for A&M v eterans at which Gen eral Eisenhower spoke. Campus Muster w as held on the steps of the MSC, in Kyle Field, on the Adminis tration lawn, and more recently in G. Rol lie White. Occasionally, as in 1962, campus Muster was eliminated due to Easter holi- davs, but the tradition has endured since 1946. This year's Muster was originallv planned for the Administration lawn, but due to bad weather it will be held in the Coliseum. Cbe Battalion Vol. 68 No. 109 College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 20, 1976 Nelson B. Hunt pleads no contest Associated Press DALLAS — Federal charges of obstruc tion of justice were dismissed Monday against four men, including two sons of the late Dallas oil billionaire H. L. Hunt. In exchange, three of the men pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor action ■ The plea bargain was worked out be tween defense attorneys and prosecutors in the cases of Nelson Bunker Hunt, W. Her bert Hunt and prominent Dallas lawyers Charles Tessmer and B. H. Timmins. In exchange for dismissal of the obstruc tion of justice charges, Nelson Bunker Hunt, Tessmer and Timmins pleaded no contest to a federal information accusing them of what amounted to misdemeanor contempt of court in their dealings with a federal grand jury. W. Herbert Hunt was cleared of all charges in the bargaining. Index Parents Day at A&M was also Awards Day at the University. Stories, Photos Page 4. Texas A&M men finished second in the Baylor track meet despite four firsts. Page 8. Three basketball players share ‘Most Valuable Player award. Page 9. Rock-music lovers got their money s worth, says Paul Mueller in his review. Page 5. Weather Fair and mild today with a high in the upper 70s. Low to night in the mid-50s. Continued fair and mild tomorrow with a high in the upper 70s. No rain is predicted. Rainfall in the last 24 hours in the College Station area measured .76 inches. Eighteen tornadoes were sighted across the state last night and this morning. One in jured 11 persons and destroyed three homes outside Brown- wood. Hearst’s credibility challenged Mexico to investigate Howard Hughes’ aide Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A prosecutor, ihllenging Patricia Hearst’s credibility as Wnformer, says the secret bank robbery she told authorities was motivated by oy; Ity to her underground lover, Steven iiqlbh. Hsst. U.S. Atty. Richard Nichols, oppos ing Soliah s request to open Miss Hearst’s revelations to public view, indicated Monday that authorities believed the convict-heiress has lied about the robbery. Soliah is the only person charged in the April 21, 1975, robbery of a Crocker Na tional Bank branch in suburban Car michael in which a woman customer was slain by a shotgun blast. “There is rational reason for disbelieving wo-car, head-on collision ills parents, sister survives AL TROLS jhe parents of two Texas A&M students were killed in a two-car, head-on collison Suiday evening on HWY 21, approxi- Rtely two miles west of Bryan. Harold R. McGilvray, 65, of 6815 N. Vandiver, San Antonio and his wife, Neta, were returning Mine with their daughter, Brenda Kay, 13, filer having spent Parents Day at A&M. HPhis morning Brenda McGilvray was listed in satisfactory condition, and is in intensive care in St. Joseph Hospital with a bloken leg and arm. ■antes Francis Hickman of Bishop, B\as, the driver of the other car, was transferred from St. Joseph Hospital to It thodist Hospital in Houston Monday morning and was reported in fair condition this morning. He has a broken leg and pos sible head injuries and internal bleeding, authorities said. Hickman, a mechanical engineering major, apparently lost control of his car at approximately 5:50 p.m. on wet pavement as he attempted to pass some construction work on HWY 21. He swerved across the median, hitting the McGilvray car in the westbound lane. McGilvray has two sons enrolled at A&M. Lester Kieth McGilvray is a sopho more psychology student and Richard H. McGilvray is a senior in environmental de sign. a woman who wants to look out for her boyfriend, and that’s what it comes down to,” said Nichols. Miss Hearst’s truthfulness is at the cen ter of a dispute in which a major decision was due today. U.S. District Court Judge Philip Wilkins said he would decide whether to hold a full-fledged hearing de manded by Soliah’s defense. The hearing, eliciting testimony from prosecutors and FBI agents, would inves tigate details Miss Hearst confided about the Carmichael robbery. The government argued that the story is irrelevant because it probably is not true. “There is certainly an element of self- servingness and protectiveness to one’s friend in any statement Miss Hearst might have made,” Nichols said. Soliah’s attorney, Sheldon Otis, said he could prove at a hearing that prosecutors ignored Miss Hearst’s scenario of the bank robbery because it differed with the recol lections of two eyewitnesses. “Miss Hearst told them that Steven Sol iah was not in the bank when it was rob bed,” Otis declared. The two eyewitnesses have placed the 27-year-old house painter inside the bank. In the first open court discussion of Miss Hearst’s secret talks with prosecutors, Otis said he knew that U.S. Atty. Dwayne, Keyes and others had listened to Miss Hearst in meetings at the San Francisco federal building between March 4 and April 12, during and after her own bank robbery trial. She was convicted March 20 and is under temporary sentence awaiting 90 days of psychological tests. The attorney made no mention of sum moning Miss Hearst. She is confined to a Redwood City hospital for treatment of a collapsed lung. Associated Press ACAPULCO, Mexico — The Mexican attorney general’s office has appealed to a high court the case of Clarence Albert Waldron, a private secretary of Howard Hughes accused of forging Hughes’ signa ture on his Mexican tourist card. Waldron, 41, Sun Valley, Calif., was cleared of the charge last Tuesday by Fed eral District Court Judge Antonio Uribe, who ruled there was insufficient evidence to support the accusation. Waldron left for the United States shortly after he was re leased from the Acapulco jail. Federal prosecutor Manuel Rodriguez Delgadillo, in charge of the attorney gen eral’s judicial police office here, said the case had been appealed Rodriguez Delgadillo also said the judi cial police investigation of Waldron and of Hughes’ stay in Acapulco would be reopened to determine whether to bring other charges against Hughes’ aides, possi bly involving smuggling and bribery. “We have a storage room of foreign goods which were illegally introduced into the country by this group,” Rodriguez De lgadillo said ' He added that among the goods seized by police from the 20th floor of the Acapulco Princess Hotel where Hughes lived from Feb. 11 to April 5 are “three or four filing cabinets and a desk. ” “I don’t know if there are documents inside them,” Rodriguez Delgadillo said. “They are locked, and we have sealed them. We don’t intend to open them until they are returned. Commenting on speculation in the local press that Hughes’ missing will could be inside, Rodriguez Delgadillo said, “I think it is infantile to believe the will of Mr. Hughes would be found inside. No one has claimed the goods up to now. Panel suggests frat house ordinance ord trails Reagan In delegate battle I 1 By The Associated Press ASHINGTON — President Ford is trailing Ronald Reagan in their contest for Kxas delegates to the Republican Na- fttnal Convention, former Texas Gov. John Connally says. listings ready ^B r al] pre-registration schedules are now available in the registrar’s office in the fa ke building. Pre-registration for the fall ®lnester 1976, will begin at 8:00 a.m. On Monday, April 26 and end at 5:00 p.m. April 30. ■Only students that are currently en- ro led for the present spring semester will ■ allowed to pre-register during this time. ■Students can secure their card packets at tli; office of their department head. Iden- jti! ation cards will be required for stu- Knts to receive their card packets. ■ Each student (undergraduate or gi iduate) will report to the head of his Major department to begin pre- Mgbtration. Students will also be able to Mquest a specific instructor or time prefer- Biee for each course requested. M No fees for the fall semester will be col- M^ted during pre-registration. A fee Matement will be mailed to the student’s Krmanent mailing address by the Fiscal M e P art ment on or about July 15. By JIM CRAWLEY An ordinance requiring social frater nities and sororities to get special permis sion from College Station before building fraternity houses was recommended by the College Station Planning and Zoning Commission last night. The recommended ordinance will be submitted to the City Council at this Thursday night’s meeting. Under the proposed ordinance, each fraternity or sorority house would have to be located in a certain zone classification But Connally told reporters at a GOP fund-raiser in Austin last night that the vote could swing either way in the closing days before Texas May 1 primary. If 10 per cent of Texas’ Republicans change their minds in the last three days, it could alter the outcome, Connally pre dicted. He also promised to tell Texans before May 1 why he has remained neu tral. His influence, Connally said, has been grossly exaggerated. Local and state GOP officials honored Connally at a $50-a-plate dinner. The former Democrat told the crowd of500 that he felt like former President Nixon must have felt when he got off the plane recently in Peking — “It’s nice to be back among friends.” President Ford told a group of news paper editors in the White House yester day that Reagan was absolutely irresponsi ble for advocating an end to the current Panama Canal negotiations. There was no immediate response from Reagan, who did not campaign Monday. Reagan, who has been hammering away against Ford’s defense policies, has charged that the negotiations will lead to a surrender of America’s control over the Canal Zone. Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Harry Jackson of Washington told suppor- (See Ford, Page 5.) and would be required to have a “condi tional permit”. Before granting the permit, the city would hold a public hearing. The present zoning ordinance allows the houses in three types ol zoning areas: R-3, R-6 and R-7. The R-3, 6 and 7 zoning areas are different densities of apartments, ranging from high to low density. The recommended change allows the houses only in the C-l, R-3 and R-6 zoning areas. The seven-member panel was told by Al Mayo, city planner, that several courts have ruled that fraternity houses are not normal multi-family dwellings. One of the reasons cited by the courts was the higher levels of traffic and noise in a fraternity or sorority house. “Each one (fraternity house) should be looked at separately,” said Mayo, in pre senting the proposed ordinance change to the commission members. Two panel members suggested that a separate zone be designated for fraternity houses that would be different from the present zone classes. RHA casino turns students into gamblers By DEBBY KRENEK What does it feel like to be a mil lionaire? If you went to the fourth annual Residence Hall Association’s Casino Friday night, chances are you found out—for a little while anyway. For four hours, the MSC ballroom was transformed into a minature Las Vegas, complete with roulette wheels, crap tables, blackjack, chuck-a-luck and a wheel of fortune. A chuck-a-luck is a wire cage for rol ling dice. Each player’s $2 was immediately transformed into $2,000 in play- money upon entering Casino, and customers were allowed three hours (See Millions, Page 5.) Millions of dollars were won and lost Friday night at the Memorial Student Center and no one seemed upset. RHA’s Casino gave students a chance to try their luck at blackjack, craps, roulette and other games. Staff photos by Jim Hendrickson In other business before the commis sion, the city staff was told to set up a fee proposal whereby developers would pay to defray the costs of making public notices before a zoning change. The group refused to re-evaluate a zon ing request that was disapproved at the last meeting. The request was from Tri-County Teacher’s Credit Union. The organization wants to build an office on University Drive near Zarape s Restaurant. The City Coun cil will act on the zoning request at this week’s meeting.