Slouch by Jim Earle It still feels good!’ Opinion It s not just women Texas A&M University and its Corps of Cadets have received a large dose of bad press over the last two weeks. The recent developments have served to start a new wave of “my, how terrible those Corps Turds are” articles in outside media. And, for anybody reading those articles, those Corps Turds are indeed terrible. One focus of the publicity is correct: Women are and have been unjustly excluded from various Corps organizations. The details of how women cadets have been unduly haras sed are another matter. But nobody save Ags or old Ags can appreciate the signifi cance, or insignificance, of A&M’s traditional types of harassment, including the activities of both Corps members and civilian students. Who could ;argue with the unrighteousness of female Corps urembers being soap-bombed, or having animal car casses thrown through their windows? But how do you explain that things like that had been going on long before women even dreamed of joining the Corps? Isn’t it equally terrible that male Corps members flood each other out regularly? That several times in a semester dormitory hallways reek with the odor of 55 gallons of pig manure? That many Aggies have spent many an afternoon spreadeagled beneath a deluge of water from a shower window? That cadets often express their affection for their superiors by leaving dead animals in locked closets, or in air conditioner vents? Those who’ve been around awhile realize that, although certainly women in the Corps have received an undue amount of harassment, that harassment is no different in form than that received by unpopular male cadets. Unfortunately for the Corps, a judge is not likely to perceive the distinction between harassment and discrimi nation. the small society by Brickman The Battalion U S P S 045 360 LETTERS POLICY letters to the editor should not exceed 3(H) words and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the icritcr and list a telephone number for verification. Address correspondence to letters to the Editor. The Battalion. Room 216. Reed McDonald Building. College Station. Texas 77643. Represented nationally by National Educational Adver tising Services. Inc.. New York City, Chicago and I^os Angeles. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday from September through May except during exam and holiday Periods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesda> hrough Thursdas. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester; $33.25 per chool year; $35. (X) per full year. Advertising rates furnished eqi st. Addr The Battali< Me !>>nald Building. College Station. Texas United Press International is entitled exchi use for reproduction of all news dispatches c Rights of reproduction of all other matter hen Second-Class postage paid at College Station 216. 77843 siveb to the edited to it in reserved TX 77843 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Liz Newlin Managing Editor Andy Williams Asst. Managing Editor Dillard Stone News Editors Karen Cornelison and Michelle Burrowes Sports Editor Sean Petty City Editor Roy Bragg Campus Editor Keith Taylor Focus Editor Beth Calhoun Staff Writers Meril Edwards, Nancy Andersen, Louie Arthur, Richard Oliver, ’ Mark Patterson, Carolyn Blosser, Kurt Allen, Debbie Nelson, Rhonda Watters Photo Editor Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Photographers Lynn Blanco, Sam Stroder, Ken Herrera Cartoonist Doug Graham Opinion* expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Regents. 'The Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Viewpoint The Battalion Texas A&M University WASHINGTON By STEVE GERSTEL United Press International WASHINGTON — Every afternoon of late, the chaffeur-driven black Cadillac wheels Secretary of State Cyrus Vance from the State Department to Capitol Hill. The mission is important: To brief Sen ate and House leaders and the Capitol’s foreign affairs experts on the situation in Iran. After nearly three years of of almost total non-cooperation between the White House and Congress, these two branches of the government have finally adopted a temporary truce. But it took a situation as desperate as the holding of 50 American hostages in Iran to bring it about. Even then, the scenario developed slowly. During the first several days after the hostages were seized, the White House did not share its counsel with Congress. There was some briefing, but nothing that would be considered a give-and-take. After some bitter complaining by con gressional leaders, the decision was reached to bring them actively into the crisis situation. As a result, Vance has made the pilgrim age to Capitol Hill daily and it has become so much part of hi routine that it is now listed on his schedule of public activities. The first stop is the “hideway” office of House Speaker Thomas O’Neill on the second floor of the Capitol. The time usual ly is around 4 p.m. Gathered in OV'NeiH’s office are House Democratic Leader Jim Wright of Texas and House Republican Leader John Rhodes of Arizona, their top deputies and the chairman and ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Vance briefs the House leaders about developments in the past 24 hours, takes questions, even accepts suggestions. From O’Neill’s lair, Vance moves to the office of Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd. Senate Republican leader Howard Baker has been absent most ot the time -— off campaigning for the Republican presiden tial nomination. But his deputy, Ted Stevens of Alaska, has attended faithfully and presumably keeps Baker informed. Cor This i producinf sources oi uidleine Many i :ause fool jasketbal or or on! entire ath should be ilculatioi But un ines, all f nther sex inds incl fees, dor inds. Under I versify ha |ntercolle imount o for the m [he per ca ian wool would il.OOO f women's The U taken the iut autho fegulatioi irogram inds. In coir lideline red Dav itence ol jeopard latory sc Additic il.l mill iring the jth the 'ere ado “The in require ie the de iole reve ult that ent of a ,en and Georgi ion of an ait rever ain fund: ;he curre Reman Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, and a senior Republican member Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., are : also invited. Very little, visible or concrete has emerged from the- meetings:. An exception was the unaninYOtis passage in the Senate and House of a resolution calling for release, of the hostages, the unity of Americans in de- emanding the freeing of the 50 persons and a strong suggestion that the Security Coun cil of the United Nations do all that is necessary to end the crisis. The resolution was only a non-binding expression of congressional sentiment. But, for those in Iran willing to listen, the message was clear: Congress and the president — for a change — are on the same wave length. The meetings may also have contributed to the lack of sniping at the way that Presi dent Carter is handling the Iran crisis. Members of Congress — from leaders to the lowliest freshmen — have a to hit hack when they feel leftw The investment of time by Vi the midst of the most severe crisis! the administration — could pay vidends for Carter. Whatever he elects to do in Iran will go better if Carter has the of Congress. Those daily trips l» from the area known as Foggy | across town to the Capitol may ass ter of that support. After 20 years, 'traitor’ calls Castro opportunist Effort slow infl several stituted eral gov Arthur 1 ist with search < versity. Huber Matos was a major in Fidel Cas tro’s guerrilla army, a hero of the Cuban revolution and briefly governor of Cama- guey Province until Castro denounced him as a “traitor” in 1959. During 20 long years of abominable im prisonment, Matos vowed that “if I ever got out alive I would tell my story. Matos did get out alive last month, thanks to Amnesty International and others who fought for his release. Now he is telling his story — not so much of his barbaric treatment in prison, where is was kept in communicado and often naked in a con crete box, but of how the Cuban revolution was betrayed by Fidel Castro. What earned Matos the wrath of his for mer friend and intimate was his daring to question the direction the revolution be gan taking following the overthrow of Fulgeneio Batista. “I believe,” says Matos, “Fidel saw two possibilities for the future. One was a democratic revolution, “in which he would not be the man to govern Cuba for the rest of his life.” The other was communism, which was promoted by Che Gucvera and Castro’s brother Raul. “All the changes, all the reforms could have been made democratically,” says Matos, “but he (Castro) would have had to have taken the chance that somebody else could have taken over the country, and this clashed with the personal interest:J Fidel Castro. “The thediffe ship gr primary serve is credit c< the legi Far from being the dedicated! \st revolutionary who fooled hisoM ates, the Cuban people and ej mighty United States, Castroisuw by Matos as an unprincipled opp« who would betray anything and a remain “El Hombre.” Sh Scripps-Howard Newspaper* Letters Another view on the holiday: Classes paid for, should be held t CAR! Robert 1 innocent wife whe years. A jury Jheart of i nonite charges straint a Editor: What do you think the effect would he of telling the members of a European tour that one of the days of their seven-day tour was to be a holiday and that they were free to stay in their rooms for the entire day? More than likely, it would be a response of anger and a demand for a refund for ser vices paid for but not received. A reason able request. By analogy, what would you expect the response of students to be upon learning that a day of classes (periods of instruction considered valuable enough to be ex changed for money) was to be canceled? Anger and a demand for a refund for ser vices paid for and not received, right? Wrong. What’s the difference? Maybe it’s that tourists really go to Europe to get what they paid for? — R. Jones some people connected with the band felt that organization was an end in itself, and that scholarship was to march behind the band. Another newspaper article equated the band to a live dinosaur and brought the Endangered Species Act into the picture. TAMU (my collar brass read C rather than U, but things do change), on the undergraduate level is to provide an acade mic education for the students and to in sure it was absorbed by those awarded the bachelor’s degree. A part of university life is the students opportunity to participate in extracurricular activities. These activities include all student activities and student organizations officially connected to the university. Honest encouragement is due all stu dents to participate in areas where their interests lie. To those who give the partel- lar reflex of females in varsity football, I remind you of the swiftness of change vis-a- vis head coaches. Coaches can he progressive and comfort able, it can be forced and resented, but it will be. In one case change can be a com plement to A&M. In the other it will be a detriment. Ask any dinosaur. — Dr. Edwin E. Wilkinson Jr. A.E. 1965 The Spirit moves Editor: Man, what a weekend! Bonfire Friday night, parties, seats on the 50-yard line for the game and more parties — but mainly the strong desire to beat the belli? Best laid plans, Ags, but it just (M pen that way. Thank God for the"# coverage of Bonfire by KAMU-T their presentations of That Ceil# ing” and “We’ve Never Been Lick least I felt a part of the activities. On Saturday afternoon when $ were in Kyle Field standing as the 1 Man, my only consolation was in that position and location are no' thing, because there wasn’t Twelfth Man spirit among you ated from this Ag who had been lyin' his back in the hospital for fourk The stains on my pillow case wen' hard to explain but after my many the nurses began to understand son about Aggie Spirit. — Jim Metcalf, ”5 imum { prison. Bear Gail, 41 after sin fused tc for seve He 1 assault £ wife, sa Reform: been a A&M the dinosaur THOTZ By Doug Gral Editor: I am pleased that my undergraduate alma mater continues to grow in size and prestige; however, some areas of A&M seem to be among the most progressive of the nineteenth century. A metropolitan newspaper article indi cated that the ACLU and an A&M coed are seeking to open the band. The Ross Volun teers, the Fish Drill Team and the Parsons Mounted Cavalry to women. Of these four organizations, one I was a member of and one I am not familiar with. In addition, the article indicated that DOESW'T BDUFlftE BRING- BAOC hEUlORieS FOR YOU, Oust the word ’Bom fire".... rv COWJURES IMAGES OP AXES... AND GRADES SHOT well, sie. -fit/ (