A Weather I Partly cloudy today with a high in the upper 70s. Low to- 1 00 |9 ht in the u PP er 60s - High 0.00 tomorrow in the lower 80s. ipances of precipitation are 20 1 J 4 per cent today, increasing to 30 o!oo |p r cent tonight and tomorrow. 1.17 .47 14 1.67 1.15 1.12 .33 1.41 .69 14 1.00 0.00 1.42 .70 1.96 .98 1.96 .98 Cbe Battalion Vol. 68 No. 113 College Station, Texas Tuesday, Apr. 27, 1976 3 1.00 3 0.00 2.06 1.03 .69 2.08 1.04 1.76 .96 1.76 .96 > 14 Lmerican support pledged to Africa Associated Press iUS tKA, Zambia — Secretary oi State ■ A. Kissinger took his African tour to hbia Monday and said it was time to face issues of independence, majority rule Iratial justice in southern Africa. He time has come for us to address ■issues squarely and with a sense of Hity," Kissinger declared shortly after ivlig here from Tanzania, where Presi- it Julius Nyerere said “war has started” black majority rule in Rhodesia and nj be avoided.” jlbave come here to listen and to learn Ho offer ways in which the United lies can join its efforts to Zambia’s in the H of the aspirations and values we H Kissinger said at Lusaka airport. At an earlier news conference in Tan- iia, Kissinger referred to Nyerere’s tementon Rhodesian war and said: “We >fer that the solution he found through tcliations. Ifwar has started, as we have 11 told, then it is clear that at some point it will have to be ended by negotiations. “We support majority rule. We will indi cate specific methods by which that can be achieved in our judgment. “The United States might not support the war, Nyerere, who is the chief spokesman for African liberation, told re porters after meeting with Kissinger. “We will not quarrel with that. I did not get the impression that Dr. Kissinger will support us in prosecuting the war.” As the Kissinger tour continued, the white-minority Rhodesian government in Salisbury announced that two more African guerrillas were killed by Rhodesian secu rity forces in the undefined “operational area” along the Mozambique border. It said the number of black insurgents killed this year climbed to 138, compared with the deaths of 19 Rhodesian soldiers. A curfew was imposed by police head- quarters on the road between two popular Rhodesian holiday resorts — the town of Umtali on the border with Mozambique and Hot Springs about 50 miles south. A government communique said during the day protected convoys will operate be tween the two points. It was the first ad mission of guerrilla activity in the area. One of Rhodesia’s best known junior pri vate schools. Eagle School, is perched high in the Yuma mountains and sources say plans have been made to transfer the pupils to another school. Rhodesia said it was establishing a secu rity committee with powers to ban Rhode sian news media from publishing or broad casting news items it thinks should be withheld. “The government considers a measure of control is necessary in view of the intense psychological pressures to which Rhodesia is being subjected,” said the announce ment. The penalty for violating the new censor ship laws will be a maximum fine of $14,950, or five years in jail or both. The restrictions specifically mention “local news media” and foreign journalists in Salisbury said the rules are apparently not aimed at censoring news dispatches to the outside world. In Cape Town, Police Minister J. T. Kruger said South African security police over the past few weeks arrested about 5 people running an underground network recruiting black South Africans for guerrilla training. He said the network organized by the banned African National Congress (ANC) was “badly hurt” by the arrests. Newspaper reports said blacks recruited by the network were smuggled out of South Africa along a secret trail through Swazi land and Mozambique for eventual guer rilla training in Tanzania. Security police managed to expose the network after infiltrating their own black agents as recruits. In Lusaka, Kissinger was to meet with Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, who umphrey’s hopes riding, n Pennsylvania primary 1.35 .65 14 1.30 .57 1.67 1.15 1.56 .81 14 1.57 1.13 1.56 .53 1.04 .21 14 1.00 0.00 By WALTER R. MEARS AP Special Correspondent PHILADELPHIA — He’s not on the plot but Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey has lotj riding on the Pennsylvania primary eclnon today. Itlcould determine whether the Demo ats’ senior campaigner belongs to the past 1 to the future. jimmy Carter, top man among the emocratic candidates as the primary bjiaign enters its most hectic phase, be- oves that Humphrey now looms as his fijrtr rival for the White House nornina- on. JSo Carter is trying to assemble his own op Humphrey movement — before the liriiesota senator can get started, i Parter, Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Wash- igtpnand Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona I the major contestants in Pennsylvania, feliama Gov. George C. Wallace is on the allot but he campaigned only briefly. Hnd then there are the 1,102 Pennsyl- |hla Democrats running for seats at the Hy’s national convention. One hundred ■ thirty-four of them will he elected, in ■'separate contests. ISo there are two separate sets of num- |ers to watch in judging the Pennsylvania iHrns. One is the popular vote in the fcewide test of Democratic presidential References. hat is purely advisory, a so-called Juty contest. It does not determine how Jnnsylvania will he counted in July when he Democrats choose their nominee. i Nonetheless, the candidate who wins it dll get a significant psychological boost. Harter said he expected to run first un- ess the voter turnout was slow. Jackson aid it was close, dropping his earlier fore- Est of popular vote victory. Udall said he’d lo no worse than second place. IfThe Pennsylvania delegates are being roportioned in separate competition, in bch of the 5 districts from which state pators are elected. All told, Pennsylvania Peace Corps, VISTA to look for volunteers at A&M H’eace Corps and VISTA representatives Hi be on campus next week to interview Jtential volunteers for the two programs. JStudents will be interviewed May 3-6 in [he Placement Office, Rudder Tower, pace Corps personnel will also man an ■formation table by Rudder Tower 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m. Students interested in an inter- pew should contact the Placement Office In advance. ■The recruiters are looking primarily for Haduating seniors and graduate students In agriculture, business, architecture, en gineering, education, math-science and , podern language, a representative said. fMe said recruits will begin training for the ■eace Corps or VISTA programs in July or iAugust of this year. ■The last time the Peace Corps recruited I p A&M, they interviewed 25 people and ■eceived over a dozen applications. will have 178 votes at the Democratic con vention, and that phase of the primary will determine how they are cast. Pennsylvania’s remaining 44 Demo cratic National Convention delegates will be chosen by the party’s state committee. Jackson, counting on labor and Demo cratic organization support, said he would win the delegate competition. Carter said he couldn’t forecast the outcome. Udall said he’d he a satisfied second. But it may take some time to determine how the candidates — and noncandidate Humphrey — actually fare in the delegate race. Each entry is running a slate of dele gates committed to him. But there also are 418 uncommitted Democrats on the vari ous ballots. Furthermore, some would-be delegates are still listed for presidential candidates who have quit the race, among them Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J. Shapp. Some of his delegates are now for Jackson, some are uncommitted and some prefer the other entries. Then, too, there are Humphrey supporters in the ranks of the currently uncommitted, although no one knows how many. All of that tends to put more emphasis on the Democratic popularity vote, which is fine with Carter, since he thinks he can win it. He also believes that a victory in the preference vote would influence the un committed delegates in his direction. And he acknowledges that if he doesn’t win, they would tend to turn toward others, most of them Humphrey. Humphrey remains a popular figure in Pennsylvania, where he won the 1972 pri mary. Some of Jackson’s labor supporters have said openly they would prefer Hum phrey. For the Democrat who favors Hum phrey, anyone hut Carter will do in Pennsylvania. Carter is the only candidate who now appears to have a chance of as sembling enough delegates to take clear command of the race before the conven tion. Associated Press Texas A&M freshman basketball player Karl Godine says he’ll play at a junior col lege next season and then return to the Aggies for his final two seasons of eligibil ity. Godine and Jarvis Williams, both from Houston Kashmere, were suspended through the 1976-77 season following a Southwest Conference investigation. The SWC said the players were guilty of re cruiting violations. “All I know is that I can’t stand around for a whole season and not play, ” Godine said. “I feel it would be better for me to go to a junior college where I can play 35 or 40 games next season and then, come back.” Because of varying junior college trans fer rules, Godine and Aggie Coach Shelby Metcalf say they have not decided on the school Godine will attend. Godine first considered San Jacinto Col lege in Pasadena, a perennially strong junior college team, but Metcalf said the South Zone of the Texas Junior College Athletic Conference does not permit trans fers unless they are eligible in the confer ence from which they transfer. Metcalf said the conference’s Eastern Zone recently instituted a similar rule. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules permit junior college graduates to transfer to an NCAA school and become eligible immediately. Metcalf said SWC Commissioner Cliff Speegle told him Godine and Williams would be allowed to follow such a route under terms of their SWC suspensions. Metcalf said Williams apparently has not decided if he will stay at A&M next season was expected to press for military aid to Rhodesian nationalist groups. The secre tary was also expected to hold discussions with ANC leader Joshua Nkomo, who flew to Lusaka from Salisbury. Nkomo is one of the few black Rhodesian nationalists to agree to meet with Kissinger. Nyerere said he would like to see the United States and all other countries frilly support the black liberationists fighting to topple the government of Rhodesian Pre mier Ian Smith. But Nyerere sidestepped a direct answer when he was asked if he would like to see American arms intro duced into the conflict. He said there were “limitations” as to what Washington could do. Kissinger has said the U. S. government “does not plan to give military aid in any form to the nation alist movements in Africa.” Nyerere said the United States has an obligation to support the U.N. economic embargo against the Smith government. which represents about 273,000 whites among a nation of 5.7 million blacks. Kissinger told a news conference in Tan zania his talks with Nyerere were “among the most instructive I have had with any leader” and said he would keep in close touch with him. Kissinger met Sunday with President Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya in Nairobi. Kis singer told newsmen the United States wants non-African powers to stay out of the conflict in Rhodesia, South-West Africa and South Africa. South-West Africa is ruled by South Africa under a mandate dis puted by the United Nations. Kissinger’s agenda called for him to fly to Livingstone on the border with Rhodesia to view Victoria Falls and return to Lusaka on his way to Zaire. He was also to visit Ghana, Liberia and Senegal on his tour which ends in Kenya with a U.N. conference on trade and development May 6. Godine to leave A&M, at jr. college next year or also transfer to a junior college and then return for his two final years of eligibility. “There’s no real urgency to choose the junior college, if that’s what they want to do,” Metcalf said. T’ve been tied up with recruiting and the last time we talked, Jar vis said he was going to stay here next season.” The SWC also penalized the Aggies two scholarships for next season, but Metcalf said the Aggies would not benefit if Godine and Williams transfer. “We’d still have to save a scholarship for them so we’d just have to bank’ two scholarships,” Metcalf said. Another complicating factor could arise from an upcoming NCAA investigation of the Godine-Williams case. That probe is expected to begin in several months. Index The new policies will not change the quality of marines’ training, a ' general says. Page 4. Ford begins his longest speaking tour of the campaign. Page 3. Olin Teague denies claims that he has been neglecting his duties. Page 3. A new degree will be offered here next year. Page 5. Young and old joined together in the activities at the second annual Folk Art Festival held at Thomas Park Sunday afternoon. The festival. sponsored by the parks and recreation depart ment, featured crafts and games of the 1800’s, including chair making and butter churning. Folk festival features cornbread and crafts By ELAINE MERRIFIELD Have you ever played with a hooey stick, churned butter or eaten cornbread that has been cooked outdoors? Eight hundred people got to do these things and more at the second annual Folk Art Festival held at Thomas Park Sunday afternoon. The Folk Festival, sponsored by Texas A&M recreation and parks department and the parks and recreation department of College Station, gave people an opportu nity to observe firsthand some of the crafts of the Brazos Valley area during the 1800s. Students in the recreation and parks de partment, dressed in 1800-style costumes, demonstrated such arts and crafts as mak ing chairs, braiding rope and whittling hooey sticks. A hooey stick is a small stick made of pine or other soft wood. It has a row of notches cut in the top and a propeller on the end. When a stick is rubbed across the notches, the propeller spins. According to a young lady who claimed to be an old toymaker’s apprentice, if, while rubbing the hooey stick someone yells hooey, the propeller will stop spinning and start going in the opposite direction. This is how the hooey stick got its name. Denise Gordon demonstrated how to churn butter using one of the more “modern” models of churns. It was 70 years old and looked like an eggbeater that screwed onto the top of a jar of cream. This method of churning only took five minutes to make butter, whereas the old-fashioned style churn that used a dasher took 30 to 40 minutes. All of that butter didn’t go to waste. Bruce Weinheimer made cornbread in a Dutch oven and cooked it in a bed of coals. This cornbread, thickly spread with fresh butter, was a favorite among the crowd. Weinheimer said, his key to a successful pan of cornbread was simple. “Don’t measure anything,” he said. “That way you get variation.” While they munched on their cornbread, the spectators listened to foot- stomping folk music. Robin Pfannstiel led the singing and played the guitar and the harmonica. He was dressed in faded over alls, a flannel shirt with a red handkerchief tied around his neck and a straw hat. Several other guitars, two banjos and even a jug and a washboard made up the rest of the band. Some of the younger members of the crowd joined in the music with jew s harps and tambourines. The women had an opportunity to par ticipate in typical female activites of the 1800s. They could learn how to make dolls out of cornhusks, embroider samplers or candles. Many of the males also seemed to be interested in the candle making as there was always a crowd at this exhibit. However, the taffy pull was the most popular event of the festival. Mike Tibbs and Cindy Erwin had plenty of help stir ring the taffy which was cooked on an old woodburning stove. After the taffy was cooked, it was poured onto a marble slab to cool. The children waited impatiently around the slab with hands greased and ready to start pulling the candy. When Erwin finally announced that the taffy was ready, 40 pairs of buttered hands shot out to receive the first piece. Everyone went home a little sticky from the taffy, a little burned by the sun, but with a better understanding of what life was like 100 years ago. 1.05 .22 1.39 .79 14 2.00 1.73 1.32 .63 1.21 .43 14 1.21 .43 Jack Ford gives reasons for Ford in ’76 Dressed in beige corduroy pants, a red- and white-checked shirt and blue blazer. Jack Ford sat poised and composed as he addressed an enthusiastic audience in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom last night. The standing-room-only crowd, com prised mostly of females, based the major ity of their questions on Gerald Ford’s presidential campaign. But the hour long session also brought Ford an invitation for dinner, an invitation to drink beer, and one of the female spectators even asked for the glass he was drinking from. But Ford, surrounded by Secret Ser vicemen and posters of his father, re mained calm as he answered all of the ques tions he was asked. “The man is going to promise you what he can produce and then produce what he promises,” Ford said as he gave the first of three reasons why voters should cast their votes for Gerald Ford in Saturday’s pri mary. He said his father is “one who is going to put the good of the country before his per sonal, political gains. The third reason, an issue he said he considers to be the cor nerstone of the Ford administration, is President Ford’s economic policy. “We have an opportunity for the first time in my lifetime to see long range eco nomic stability,” Ford said, as he noted that the inflation rate has decreased from 14.7 per cent last July to less than 4.7 per cent now. He also remarked that his father would prefer to run against Hubert Hum phrey in the November election because that would present a clearcut opportunity for American voters to decide between big spending and a more conservative fiscal administration. One of the major topics discussed was the energy problem. When asked if the President has further plans for energy pro grams as a result of last year’s problems with Congress, Ford replied, “We were very disappointed with the lack of respon sibility on the part of Congress. Congress passed 5 of the 13 specific majors our ad ministration proposed last year.” He said the Ford administration will keep pushing for a comprehensive energy program which will include deregulation of oil and gas prices so that other oil and gas resources can be developed in the country. Another issue raised was the foreign re lations policy. When asked why the Presi dent dropped the word detente from use in foreign policy statements. Ford said that the word had become a code word repre senting more than it should. He said he feels everyone agrees that the U.S. should pursue the principle of nuclear disarmament and discussions with other foreign powers to try and relax tension in the world, but the word detente was halt ing such progress. “No one wants to go back to the cold war,” Ford said, “and the word detente seemed to represent that. Ford also said that the administration is trying very aggressively to find a solution to the problem of Americans missing in action (MIA) from the Vietnam war, which allows us to account for the MIA’s but doesn’t “require the U.S. to sell its soul to the North Vietnamese. He said it is a very delicate situation with high priority among programs his father will pursue. On the subject of busing. Ford said that the education question has “gotten wrap ped up in forced busing instead of quality education.” He said that we need to ad dress ourselves more towards quality edu cation and less towards the psychological aspects. He said his father is in favor of letting communities work out their own integration systems and using busing only as a last resort. The President’s stand on handguns rep resents a two-fold attack, Ford said. First, a mandatory sentencing for anyone who commits a crime involving a handgun, “with no questions asked, he added. Sec ondly, President Ford proposes a cease in manufacturing of the small handguns, or Saturday-night specials, that are present ing the largest problem, coupled with a 200 per cent increase in federal agents hired to enforce handgun laws. On the subject of national health insur ance aid and socialized medicine. Ford said that the first and foremost area to deal with is catastrophic illness, the most devastating to the American family.