Battalion Cloudy and warm with winds light and variable. High today of 85 and a low of 70. Expected rain throughout the day. Vol. 72 No. 154 10 Pages Tuesday, June 5, 1979 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 t :! l! ! South African president resigns; accused of information cover-ups Battalion photo by Clay Cockrill Rumors turn into reality Students found rumors to be true about the long lines for summer school registration as they waited outside DeWare Field House to begin registration Monday. When students were allowed in, the lines moved rapidly, however. United Press International CAPE TOWN, South Africa — South African President John Vorster resigned Monday after an investigating commission said he actively conspired with other offi cials in trying to cover up the the country’s explosive information scandal. The resignation was announced as Par liament received a report by a government commission of inquiry that accused Vors ter of covering up serious illegal activities in the Information Ministry for more than 12 months while he was prime minister. The Information Ministry scandal re volved around the unauthorized spending of millions of tax dollars by senior informa tion officials to try to bolster South Africa’s image at home and abroad. The commission, headed by Judge Rudolph Erasmus, submitted the 72-page report to Parliament after several copies were leaked to local and foreign news papers and agencies. Prime Minister P.W. Botha said Senate President Marais Viljoen would stand in as temporary federal president until some one else could be elected to the office. Viljoen is a former Cabinet minister who once served as information secretary of the ruling National Party. In stepping down, Vorster ended a 26- year political career — 13 of them as prime minister — in disgrace. The investigating commission found that Vorster, who steadfastly denied know ing about irregularities in the information department until September 1978, had been given the facts the previous year and concealed his knowledge from his Cabinet and the public. By not revealing what he knew, the commissioners found, “he was not only doing the members of his Cabinet an in justice but was in fact participating in ac tion which in itself was a serious irregular- .11.7 U.0i ..M w .'pM Service cutbacks and team fees to be requested by Intramurals BY KEITH TAYLOR Battalion StafF There will be no more 1 a.m. rac- I quetball games with your girlfriend ■ at DeWare Field House, and a $5 I fee to enter your basketball team in I the intramural games if a proposal I requested by the Intramural De- | partment is approved by the Board I of Regents in August. The Texas A&M University In- I tramurals Department is facing cut- I backs in services due to the Student I Government Finance Committee’s I denial of a requested 63.4 percent increase in the intramural budget on April 4. The student government allocates money taken from student service fees to the department to run the intramural sports program. Dennis Corrington, director of in tramurals, said Monday that the student government did not have enough money from student service fees to grant the increase. The 1978-79 budget totaled $285,420. The requested budget for the 1979-80 year was $466,445, but the student government allocated New federal oil, coal 1.2? Programs announced United Press International WASHINGTON — Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus Monday announced new pro grams for developing energy resources on federal on and offshore lands, including an end to a nine-year freeze on new coal leasing on lands in the West. t Andrus announced a new coal management program which will allow for the asing of an estimated 1.5 billion tons of coal on federal lands beginning in 1981. urrently, more than 60 million tons of federal coal are mined annually as compared ith total national coal production in 1977 of 691 million tons, fc I JBf Leasing of most federally-owned coal stopped in 1971 as a result of a suit brought by the Natural Resources Defense Council against the Interior Department. The new >rogram received the approval of a federal judge in settling the suit. “I am taking three important steps as part of President Carter’s energy policy to reduce the nation’s dependency on foreign oil,’’ said Andrus. Andrus also said he has changed his mind and has decided to increase the number of offshore oil and gas lease sales from a schedule announced in March. He also said he will change the government’s “oil and gas lottery” which applies to ome on-shore lands. Andrus said the lottery system, with a $10 filing fee and a dollar per acre per year in rent, “encourages speculation, not development. ” Andrus also said he will ask Congress to expand competitive oil and gas leasing on public lands in a manner similar to the way firms bid on offshore leases. The government owns about 60 percent of the coal in the West, with development of an additional 20 percent dependent on the availability of federal coal. The federal coal is concentrated in six western states — Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Utah and Wyoming. Andrus now said he will increase the number of sales, as well as the “quantity and quality” of the acreage leased to meet over 90 percent of the oil and gas production goals set by the Energy Department. able Registration fees payable today; 2|late registration until Thursday 1}...... I .*.— C * ., tT IJ ......... C" 1 .. . i»' t-. /■} +-1. .. i- .-.1. . . .11.. l' L~ t'11 Battalion StafF Report Long, but fast-moving, lines characterized summer school regis tration Monday which Associate Registrar Donald Carter said went “smooth as silk.” Carter said he had no problems or complaints concerning registration which was held from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. He estimated that at least 10,000 students had registered in the five hour period. The official number of students registered will not be known until late registration is finished. Carter said the schedules of stu dents who registered Monday will be available at 8 a.m. Tuesday in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Fees must be paid before a stu dent can receive a schedule. The fees may be paid from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wed nesday and Thursday. Late registration begins at 8 a.m. Tuesday in the coliseum, and will continue until Thursday. There is a $10 charge for late registration. Registration of students who have, not paid their fees by 5 p.m. Thurs day will be cancelled. $309,265 for the 79-80 year, an 8 percent increase over the previous year. Corrington said the increase in the budget was necessary to com pensate for increases in student body size and raises in the minimum wage. The department also needed to f increase the number of referees and clerical workers, and buy new equipment. The intramurals department em ploys about 350 student workers. The workers include referees for sports, emergency medical techni cians, I.D. checkers at DeWare Field House and office workers. The minimum wage increased from $2.50 an hour to $2.90 in January, and will increase again in September to $3.10 an hour. The department does not plan to cut back on the number of student employees, he said. Corrington and four full-time staff members receive 75 percent of their pay from the allocation from the student government. The other 25 percent comes from the Depart ment of Health and Physical Educa tion, he said. The full-time staffers teach 3 hours of physical education classes during a semester. Corrington also said he would not be able to purchase new equipment he had planned to. Since the department did not re ceive the increase in funds, Cor rington said he will take a proposal to the Board of Regents to allow an entry fee for team sports. The fee will be $5 if the regents approve his proposal, he said. Corrington said he expects 550 football teams to sign up in the fall. The proposal will also shorten the DeWare Field House operating hours from 4 p.m. until 2 a.m. to 4 p.m. until midnight, he said. Referees will not receive pay dur ing their training period, as they have in the past, Corrington said. The department will also charge a 25 cent rental fee on racquetball racquets and 50 cents to rent a ten nis racquet if the regents approve the proposal, he said. The present policy states that if the racquet is damaged, the student must pay for a replacement, but Corrington said this was too hard to enforce, and the new system would be more fair. The original proposal would have charged a $15 faculty/staff user fee and a $5 fee for their spouses. Cor rington said this part of the proposal was dropped. The department also has a $16,000 reserve fund to use if needed, he said. The reserve fund comes from the sale of racquetballs and forfeit fines. If the proposal is accepted, the new policies will take effect in the fall semester. ity: the covering-up of gross ir regularities.” Former Information Minister Connie Mulder, who engineered the infomration projects in question, said Vorster was aware of the operations. Vorster denied it. The commission reached the conclusion that Vorster “knew everything about the basic financial arrangements for the de partment’s funds. He was consulted about the secret funds as well as the projects themselves.” The Erasmus commission report noted that Vorster, 63, had reproached ex information minister Mulder this year for keeping quiet when the parliamentary op position and newspapers charged his Cabinet colleagues with being implicated in the irregularities. “In essence, however, a similar re proach can be addressed to Mr. Vorster,” the commission found. “For more than a year Mr. Vorster, together with Dr. Mul der, kept his knowledge of irregularities in the administration of the country from his Cabinet colleagues.” The commissioners found Vorster’s be havior “unacceptable” for failing to stop the wrongdoings or to share his knowledge with his Cabinet. “Why did he not reveal the facts?” the report asked. The commissioners did not directly an swer its own question, but quoted the evi dence of a lawyer, Rit van Rooyen, who said that in a discussion with Vorster he asked if there was not an element of blackmail in the prime minister’s failure to act. Van Rooyen said he had heard that former Information Department Secretary Eschel Rhoodie, now in hiding abroad, had threatened to bring down the Vorster government if action was taken against him. Van Rooyen told the commissioners: “Mr. Vorster’s answer to me was: “One thousand percent. He held the political lives of my ministers in the hollow of his hand.’” The report noted: “Even this piece of evidence given by Van Rooyen later proved to be true.” Prime minister Botha called an urgent Cabinet meeting to discuss the report and its implications. In announcing the resignation, the prime minister wished Vorster well, not ing that he had been in poor health and ■ Iran vetoes Cutler; blasts U.S. meddling United Press International WASHINGTON — In a sign of a deeper chill in relations with Iran, the Tehran government has asked the United States to withdraw the name of ambassador- designate Walter Cutler, the State Department announced Monday. Department spokesman Hodding Carter said the United States has no intention of withdrawing Ambassador Cutler from the assignment. Cutler, the former U.S. ambassador to Zaire, has already been confirmed by the Senate as envoy to Tehran. But the Iranian government asked two weeks ago that his arrival be delayed after the Senate passed a resolution condemning the summary trials and executions in Iran. The State Department rejected the Iranian criticism, even when it was echoed by Foreign Minister Ibrahim Yazdi, who said that Iran would be prepared to break off relations with Washington if the United States continued to interfere in Iran’s domes tic relations. Carter described Cutler “as one of the more able foreign service officers.” “If the Iranian request is a final decision, we anticipate a substantial delay in resolving the question of ambassadorial representation,” Carter said. “The action of the Iranian government is not helpful in helping restore a construc tive relationship.” Until the question of the ambassador is resolved, the deputy chief of mission, Charles Naas, is acting U.S. ambassador. mi£ 79 Slouch gigs ’em! Quarter century of Aggie gibes Could someone gig Aggies on a regu lar basis and make them like it? A former pugilist has — through the cartoon character “Slouch.” The cartoon Aggie was known in the first 20 years of his quarter cen tury of existence as “Cadet Slouch.” The cartoonist is Dr. James H. Earle, professor and head of Texas A&M’s Department of Engineering Design Graphics. Through his pen, a nondescript youth who formerly ap peared in military uniform has re marked for 25 years on a variety of issues and ideas. Most are Texas A&M-related. One recent cartoon reveals a stu dent with his graduation regalia: “I keep having the same dream,” he says to Slouch. “A guy goes across the stage and gets a diploma and handshake, and I go across and get a handshake.” No Texas Aggie tradition is too sacrosanct, no cow too holy for Slouch’s gentle gibes. In one panel Slouch points to a plan for building the Aggie bonfire on its side: “I’ll admit it’s a hard concept to accept right off, but it will put an end to bonfires that topple.” Cadet Slouch first appeared in The Battalion Nov. 26, 1953, Earle’s senior year. It shows tipsy students out cold while guarding the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross from over- zealous, paint-throwing gridiron op ponents. The pedestal contains only “ Sul ly’s” footprints. Subjects of early Cadet Slouch ob servations included campus traffic violations, country-Western music dedications, dining hall food, class assignments, campus construction and other matters still a subject of student complaint 25 years later. Slouch rarely gets heavily idealis tic, and less frequently demonstrates or advocates. “The best Slouch topics are issues most people deal with,” Earle said. “Slouch makes the average person feel he has a spokesman. “I will tackel a serious situation occasionally. People may be getting too serious about something and it needs lightening up. “I’ve always tried to be moderate because it’s more fim to make com ments than to alienate,” remarked the Class of 1954 member with de grees in architecture and industrial education. He was a pole vaulter on the Aggie track team and an in tramural boxing champion. "It’s been somewhat of a relief that I could say some things graphically that said in writing would have got ten me in trouble. A cartoonist can do it in a way people will accept good naturedly,” Earle said. “I average about four cartoons a week during the regular school year,” Earle tabulated. “That comes to 3,600 to 25 years. That’s a bunch of cartoons, or ideas.” under a great deal of strain due to the scandal. The scandal stemmed from the secret use of millions 6f dollars to promote at home and abroad the government policies of racial separation by a now defunct In formation Department while it was com-* manded by Muldera, the former race rela tions minister. Other funds were used to create the johannesburg English-language Citizen newspaper and subsidize the news magazine To The Point. 1 i ' i . ! I