Battalion Inside Wednesday Seminar focuses on getting jobs, writing resumes, p. 5 A funny cartoon, p. 11 Aggies lose to the Arkansas Razor- backs 84-68, p. 14 Wednesday, January 18, 1978 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 -FM could fold if budget is cut By LIZ NEWLIN Battalion StafT Texas A&M University radio, KAMU-FM, will go off lie air Aug. 31, 1978, unless drastic changes are made in tiie proposed budget for fiscal 1978. The radio station may cease operations by March to jhannel funds to KAMU-TV if the budget cut is con- srmed, an informed source said Tuesday night. Student Government station KANM is unaffected by any Univer sity budget decisions, because its funds come from student lervice fees. University officials declined to comment on the pro posed budget cuts for the educational television and radio stations. University administrators’ only official comment Tas that budget planning for fiscal 1978-79 had just begun, Ind that “nothing has been finalized, either for the univer sity overall or any of its divisions. Effects of the decision are outlined in two memoran dums given to station workers Friday. “Prospects for outside (non-federal) funds for KAMU- ■"M support are very poor,’ the memo states. “Prospects federal funds are worse. . . Therefore, in view of the ecent budget decisions for account 16150, KAMU-FM ill go off the air at the end of this fiscal year. “The $169,000 worth of equipment involved in the radio tation was purchased with HEW funds; it, therefore, annot be sold or rented for 10 years, the memo con- inues. Five full-time staff members, three part-time workers ad eight student assistants are supported by the budget. The memo was sent from Leatha Miloy, director of edu- ational information services, to Dr. J. M. Prescott, vice Biresident for academic affairs. It states the five full-time taffers will be absorbed by the television station. “The student workers will not be re-hired next fall,” it ays. KAMU-FM carries National Public Radio programs, imilar to Pub ^Broadcasting Service programs. Funding rom NPR w , be approximately $30,000 in fiscal 1978 , nd will trip the next five years. UM ® Money for programs purchased by KAMU-TV will be mg reduced from $75,000 to about $60,000 if the budget deci sions are respected. The cut will have several effects on KAMU-TV, accord ing to a memo sent to Miloy from Dr. Mel Chastain, direc tor of educational broadcasting services. These include: 1 • Loss of 350 hours of PBS programming per year, from more than 3,350 hours to 3,000 annually. • Loss of affiliation with the Southern Educational Network (SEGA). • Loss of almost 450 hours of weekend programming from SEGA. • Loss of such PBS programs as “NOVA,’ “The MacNeil-Lehrer Report, “Great Performances,” “Visions” and “The Dick Cavitt Show. ” • Loss of Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) funds. Reduction of University support will result in los ing $40,000 in CPB funds the following year. • Reducing student assistant workers from 20 to seven. • Reduction below practical limits of funds available for replacement of worn-out electronic parts. • Complete denial of funds for capital improvements. To keep KAMU-TV solvent, the station manager, news director and other staffers will also have to double as fund raisers, encouraging businesses to “underwrite” the pro grams if the budget is increased. Membership drives, auc tions and other fund-raising activities common to non university public television stations will also be used in addition to other cost-saving measures. “Maybe it’s the University’s way of telling the stations to be self-sufficient or get lost,” said a source, who asked that his name be withheld. “It’s ruined the morale of that station,” he added. Students majoring in communications who want to specialize in radio broadcasting could not secure paid staff positions for practical experience. Eight students are disc jockeys now. Several other students work in production, bookkeeping and news departments. Cameramen and some directors of local programs are students. Broadcast journalism students might be re quired to run the equipment, but the source pointed out that under University regulations a student could be ab sent or not do his work. “You work for what you’re paid for,” he said. “It would be a very tight situation. ” Texas A&M spent three years and more than $261,000 to prepare the grounds, build the station and hire profes sional staff to operate the station. Texas A&M has sponsored a TV station since 1970, but KAMU-FM has been on the air about eight months. The Joe Hiram Moore Communications Building was named last month. Miloy’s memo to Prescott noted, “KAMU-TV is consis tently below average in total operating budget when na tional statistics are published. . . We believe we have made some progress in spite of the fact that support from the University in account 22259 has decreased from about $80,000 in 1975 to zero in 1977.” In outlining steps to be taken if the budget cut stands, station director Chastain said the University could help by encouraging campus departments with TV capabilities, to operate jointly with KAMU-TV. Both the medical school and the College of Veterinary Medicine have television facilities. Through this cooperation, he said, the funds could be counted as part of the institutional support for CPB grant purposes. Less fund raising would therefore be required. “It is difficult to foresee all effects,” Chastain said in the memo. “For example, currently the average hourly em ployee works 47 hours per week. . . As more employees’ efforts are directed to fund-raising, work at the station must be carried on by fewer people. “When the hours-per-week limit (whatever it may be) is reached by individuals, some regular work will not be accomplished.” e gal [eduction of military forces uld help foreign relations ue, 1 tic) ' to United Press Internationa] TON — A reduction in American strength on Taiwan could help the United States and China to- normal diplomatic relations, Sen. rdM. Kennedy, D-S iss., said in his ews conference since his return from week trip to China, suggested Tuesday an exchange of by leaders o, {he' two nations and the sion of trade hlso would help achieve al relations. ickey obstacle to normalization of re- s remains the. future of the 16 million e on Taiwan, Kennedy said. “I did tpect and cannot report progress in dng that issue.” y change in relations between the id States and China would have to s peace and security in Asia, Ken- said, referring especially to Taiwan, Japan and parts of Southeast Asia. Kennedy said he told Chinese leaders he thought Americans would be willing to recognize Peking as the actual government of China as long as the Taiwanese were permitted to “continue to exist in peace and security.” He added that his talks with Chinese leaders, including Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping, helped the Chinese understanding of “the American view that Taiwan should enjoy a peaceful and pros perous future.” Kennedy said acceptance of Taiwan as an independent nation not connected with the mainland would not solve the problem of recognition. He added that the final so lution must be determined by Chinese and Taiwanese leaders themselves, not by outside forces. Kennedy said his China trip left him “more committed than ever to helping move forward the process of normalizing relations ’ between China and the United States. He said the Chinese “now consider the U.S. a potential ally” and view the Soviet Union as an adversary. Battalion photo by Susan Webb Riding is free and easy The first week of school is hectic — but traveling near the vet school, west campus, Rudder com- across campus by shuttle bus in one way to save time. Buses run from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., and stop plex, the Commons, Zachry Engineering Center, Reed McDonald Building, and Northgate. Heavy storm warnings up Snowfall continues in North United Press International Residents of a corridor from Arkansas to Pennsylvania are burrowing out from under a foot or more of snow, while the storm that caused the mess heads north east. But the national Weather Service said a temporary and slight reprieve from win ter’s nastiness is in store. A Pacific system that ominously belted California Monday showed signs of weakening on its trip through the Rockies. The storm that swept through the South and Ohio Valley on Monday and Tuesday was focusing its fury on the Northeast to day. Heavy snow and winter storm warn ings were up in portions of Ohio, the Virginias, Pennsylvania, New York and New England. The National Weather Service said five more inches of snow could fall in these areas. In Altoona, Pa., the accumulation reached 15 inches. Utility repair crews throughout the Northeast, particularly on Long Island and in Rhode Island, worked frantically to re pair lines and equipment damaged in last week’s ice storm — before the new system hit. President Carter authorized the use of giant Air Force cargo planes to carry more than 24 dozen utility trucks and 50 per sonnel from utilities in Chicago and De troit Tuesday night. Late Tuesday, Louisville, Ky., had 17 inches on the ground. Gov. Julian Carroll declared a state of emergency, ordered all trucks off the barely open interstates and placed the National Guard on stand by. Near Cairo, Ill., residents thrust a yardstick into the snow and it sank 18 inches. No official total was available be cause weatherman Don Semancik, who lives in Missouri, couldn t get to work. Millie Mignone, a weather observer who lives about 300 feet off a county road Registrar, P.E. officials differ about Concepts requirement By LIZ NEWLIN Battalion Staff Registration and physical education de partment officials will soon have to settle a controversy over whether or not a course called Concepts is needed for graduation. In classes Tuesday, P.E. teachers told students the course was necessary. Repre sentatives of the registrar’s office also said Tuesday that no student had been denied graduation because he did not take Con cepts, a course similiar to many high FBI releases final pages of investigation Battalion photo by Susan Webb The ice man cometh Diane Simmons, majoring in agronomy, gets a cold shoulder as she begins the new semester. The junior from Houston discovered these patches of ice near her apartment Tuesday morning. United Press International WASHINGTON — The FBI is laying bare the remaining 58,754 pages in its in vestigation into who killed John Kennedy and — the question it still can’t answer — why. Heavily censored raw files released today were expected to shed light on how the FBI helped persuade the Warren Commission that Lee Harvey Oswald, whatever his motives, acted alone and not as the agent of a conspiracy. All told, the FBI was making public 50,604 pages of investigative files and 8,150 pages of its communications with the Warren Commission. Except for material the FBI is permitted by the Freedom of Information Act to withhold, this opens the bureau’s entire Kennedy file to public scrutiny for the first time. An earlier release of documents Dec. 7 showed the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover concluded that Oswald fired the fatal shots, but, Hoover initially was skep tical that Oswald had acted alone. He put Oswald “in the category of a nut.” Twenty days after the slaying, the files showed, Hoover was still expressing “great concern” over whether he was the only man involved. Ultimately, as the FBI conducted 25,000 interviews and checked out thousands of tips. Hoover appared satis fied no conspiracy existed. But despite an intense effort to investi gate every aspect of Oswald’s life and movements, nothing in the files estab lished a motive for Oswald. This failure to establish why Oswald acted has helped fuel theories that he was the agent of a foreign or domestic conspi racy. The Warren Commission was left to speculate that five of Oswald’s character traits may have led him to slay the presi dent. These were: “his deep-rooted resent ment of all authority;” “his inability to enter into meaningful relationships with people;” “his urge to try to find a place in history;” “his capacity for violence,” and “his avowed commitment to Marxism and communism.’ The FBI’s first release of 40,001 pages — a quarter ton of raw files — covered material gathered from Nov. 22, 1963, the day of the slaying, to September 1964. The new documents reflect materials gathered in the years since the killing. New “tips” are still investigated, the bureau says. school health courses. Many students be lieve the course is necessary and have in cluded it in their schedules. None of the required physical education courses are described in the 1977-78 un dergraduate catalog. Students taking con cepts study physical fitness, some first aid and participate in labs designed to mea sure aspects of fitness such as cardiovascu lar endurance, flexibility and strength. Beginning last semester, all students who signed up for P.E. 101 were given Concepts. When classes are full, the com puter assigns P.E. 102, and students are required by the P.E. department to take 101 later. “I don’t even know what concepts is,” said an official in the registrar’s office. The catalog only requires P.E. 101, 102, 201 and 202. It does not specify Concepts as P.E. 101, a and a student’s record does not list Concepts either. “They could in fact require students to take a course they call Concepts,” he said in an interview Tuesday. The official said he knew of no student denied graduation for lack of Concepts. Emil Magmaliga, head of required P.E. and elective activities programs, said the P.E. department requires the course for all students. He compared it to University require ments in the English department. “Nobody tells them what to teach in English 203,” Magmaliga said. But a gen eral description of the English course is published in the catalog while Concepts is not described. Registrar officials said students who take two semesters of P.E. 102, P.E. 201 and 202, have been cleared for graduation. “I probably would let that by,” said the official. Department head Carl Landiss and reg istrar Robert Lacey were unavailable for comment. north of Marion, Ill., said she measured 16 inches of snow Tuesday morning. “If we needed help, all we could do is just sit here and scream,” she said. The winter shipping season on the St. Mary’s River system in Michigan nearly stopped when six feet of slush trapped 21 freighters. The Coast Guard ice-breaker Mackinaw slowly moved one ship at a time through the frozen areas. In the South, thunderstorms moved north into snowstorms over northern Texas. Heavy snow warnings were posted in the Colorado and New Mexico Rockies, where the Pacific system was moving. But the NWS said the Western system “is becoming less of a threat as it moves eastward.” Los Angeles Mayor Tom Brad ley called for an end to his city’s manda tory water conservation program, begun last July, because of the plentiful rains, which have hit Southern California in re cent weeks. As Bradley was speaking, a new system was on its way with more rain and snow. Health center provides new, faster service BY GLENNA WHITLEY Battalion Staff “All right. Those of you with fewer than four symptoms — to the left.” Well, maybe you don’t have to count your symptoms, but you can get faster service in the Express Line, a new service provided by the Health Center at Texas A&M University. Dr. Claude Goswick, director of the center, said Tuesday the new Express Line was allowing a doctor to see three times as many students who have minor complaints like fevers, earaches or rashes. Goswick said the service will open when the clinic becomes crowded, and will provide a brief diagnosis and treatment by a doctor. He said doctors spend three to five minutes with each patient. The Express Line differs from the cold clinic because a doctor is present and can issue prescriptions for medication. In the cold clinic only over-the-counter drugs are dispensed, and no doctor is present. Nurses make the diagnosis. “It’s worked quite well so far,” Goswick said. “I don’t think the students feel rushed. If anything, that’s what they want.” He said those who want more privacy or have more complicated problems can wait to see a doctor in the regular clinic. Because of the cold, wet weather now in College Station, Goswick predicted, “In about a week, there will be a full-fledged epidemic of flu. I feel like a prophet of doom.” ’ jmi! IHSMVS — aOOMNaM ShU* -- uuumiva/i