HON vas named earn. Run- r as Roger Che Battalion VOLUME 64 Number 121 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 6. ng hitters ; been mo- that if at d, try, tt? only .125 rile Team- ayne Mor- wut-faces. ice’s Dicl: non made Haggard returnees m to make 1 1 IT WAS HOT Summer had barely peeked around the corner before it was time for many to begin registration for summer school at A&M. Most found the sun hot and the hours long before they got through the lines of Sbisa. (Battalion Photo) Hall Program Adds Four More Dorms i ? i Texas A&M’s civilian residence hall program—off to a fast start last September—will add four dormitories next Fall, bringing the number of participating dorms to seven. Walton, Davis-Gary and Leg gett Halls will be joined by Moore, Law, Puryear and Hughes. ; The unique project started as a pilot program to help raise sagging civilian student spirits which some university officials felt existed in the once all-mili tary institution. 1 A&M’s civilian-cadet student ratio is now approximately three to one in favor of civilians. Aggie Grads Given Medals The Silver Star was among three decorations recently award ed Texas A&M graduates serving 'with the Army in Vietnam. > Lt. Col. James It. Woodall, 1950 llgraduate of Decatur, received the Silver Star for “exceptionally valorous actions,” the citation read. | The 173rd Airborne Brigade jbattalion commander monitored radio report of a Feb. 14 Viet Cong ambush. He rushed to the scene, organized an attack ele- iment and turned the situation around, causing the VC to flee and fail their mission. The Com pany “D” Infantry commander in the corps at A&M knocked out an enemy rocket launcher him self, led friendly forces success fully against a machinegun and 'directed pursuit of the routed enemy ambushers. At A&M, Woodall also was co- editor of the “Aglgieland,” a Ross Volunteer and Distinguished Military Student. The Air Medal and commen dation Medal went to Capt. Noble J. Atkins Jr. of Dallas and 1st [it. Andrew C. Salge of Skid more, respectively. , Captain Atkins, 1965 grad in S architecture, is a pilot of the 245th Surveillance Airplane (Company at Da Nang. He com- imanded Company E-3 in the [corps and was an architect with |Watson and Wagoner Associates [in College Station before going on active duty. Grove Movies Thursday-The Devil At 4 O’Clock Priday-Ocean’s 11 Saturday-The Mouse That Roared Sunday-A Man Could Get Killed Monday-Baby, The Rain Must Fall Tucsday-Robin And The 7 Hoods Wednesday-Behold A Pale Horse Howard Perry said the in crease in the hall program leaves only 10 dorms not participating. Perry is residence hall advisor. “As the students want it, and funds become available, we’ll move others into the program.” he said. “We feel the program initiated last year has developed pretty good,” he continued. “There is a good sense of unity among the civilian students. And, we feel the civilian students have found their nitch,” he said. Perry explained the special halls elect their own student gov erning body, much like a club, with officers. Each hall is re quired to ratify a constitution. Hall constitutions provide for a judiciary committee to handle minor discipline problems. Perry noted committees functioned sat isfactorily during the past two semesters without problems. He added it is obvious the new spirit among civilians is “spilling into the other halls.” More civil ian freshmen participate in stu dent activities than previous years, he cited. Earlier in the year A&M’s Civilian Student Council voted to affiliate with the National Asso ciation of College and University Residence Halls. The action followed a trip to California State College at Long Beach by three Aggies who ob served NACURH’s annual con ference. NSF Awards A&M Grant Of $42,000 The National Science Founda tion has awarded Texas A&M a $42,400 grant for “Mass Spectro- metric Investigation of Diatomic Metals, Intermetallic Compounds and Pnictides at High Tempera tures.” Principal investigator for the project is Karl A. Gingerich, pro- xessor of chemistry. The grant becomes effective June 1 for a two-year period. Gingerich said the grant will be used for synthesizing and measuring and determining bond energies for various diatomic species that have never been pre viously studied. The objective, Gingerich added, is ot increase “our understanding of the nature of the bonding in such species.” Gingerich was a senior chemist at Battelle Memorial Institute before coming to A&M last year as a professor. He received de grees at Albert Ludwigs Univer sity in Freiburg, Germany, and taught at Ludwigs, the Univer sity of Illinois and Penn State. i: Five Elected To New Academic Panel Faculty Chooses Tenure Committee ^ END OF THE LINE Once inside, many more steps were taken before reaching the end of the line where the card packets were turned in. Final tabs are not in, but it is expected that more than 5,800 will register for the first summer session. (Battalion Photo) Students Find Lady Prof To Be A Real ‘Cool Head’ Texas A&M’s new Committee on Academic F r el e d o m and Tenure will be composed of Drs. W i 1 b o u r n E. Benton, Charles L. Boyd, Edwin B. Doran Jr., Rudolph E. Leighton and Bob M. Gallaway, an nounced Academic Vice Presi dent Horace R. Byers. The five men were elected by fellow faculty members from a panel of 16 professors nomi nated by colleagues in A&M’s various colleges. Dr. Byers announced the elec tion results Wednesday follow ing tabulation of the 520 ballots. Deadline for voting was 5 p.m. Monday. The Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure, along with a Faculty Advisory Committee, was established in accordance with provisions of Texas A&M’s recently adopted Statement on Academic Freedom, Tenure and responsibility. The statement follows the policy of the Coor dinating Board, Texas College and University System. Members of the Faculty Advi sory Committee were announced this week. Each of the eight members was selected by an ad visory committee or the equiv alent in the academic college which he represents. Byers explained proposals for termination of tenured faculty initially be presented to the Fac ulty Advisory Committee. In a mutually agreeable decision is not reached with that group, the per son involved may request a hear ing before the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure. Dr. Benton is professor of po litical science; Dr. Boyd, asso ciate professor, veterinary medi cine and surgery; Dr. Doran, professor and head, Geography Department; Gallaway, professor, civil engineering, and Dr. Leigh ton, professor, animal science. Members of the Faculty Advi sory Committee are: Dr. Page W. Morgan, representing the College of Agriculture; Richard Vroo- man, College of Architecture; Dr. Russell A. Porter Jr., College of Business Administration; James H. Caddess, College of En gineering; William R. Bryant, Prof Attends Meet Dr. Paul Jungerman, veterin ary microbiology professor at A&M University, will attend the Elanco Management Seminar- Practice Improvement Program in Houston June 8. Veterinarians from Texas and Louisiana are registered for the seminar, which is designed to give private practitioners a bet ter understanding of current business management practices. Four outstanding 4-H Club members were honored during the first general assembly of the 1969 State 4-H Roundup here this week. They were James F o r t s o n Dockrey of Colorado City; Billy Dan Snow and Randall Casey Moore, both of Abilene; and Glenn D. Sparger of Grapevine. Dockrey, Snow and Sparger each received a $4,000 Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo Schol arship while Moore was awarded a $500 continuing scholarship from the G. J. Davidson Scholar ship Fund. A nine-year member of the Mitchell County 4-H Club, Dock rey is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Dockrey. He holds the Gold Star Award, the highest award that cah be presented at the county level, and has won trips to 4-H RoUndups three years as the first place winner in district competition with ’ Method Demonstrations. Snow has been a Taylor County 4-H’er for 10 years and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Snow. He won the Gold Star Award in 1967 and was Texas’ 4-H repre sentative to the State and Na tional Convention of American College of Geosciences; Dr. Car- roll D. Laverty, College of Liberal Arts; Dr. Charles E. Gates, Col lege of Science; and Dr. James H. Denton, College of Veterinary Medicine. Tellers for the Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure election were Bryant, assistant professor of oceanography; Dr. Manuel Davenport, professor and head, Philosophy Department, and Dr. John F. Griffiths, associate professor of meteorology. Foreign Opinion Is Progressive America’s progressiveness is a “first impression” for Argen tina’s Pedro G. Bordelois who is visiting Texas A&M as one of several steps on a month-long tour of the U. S. Speaking through an interpret er, Bordelais said, “. . . it does not wait for the future ... it grasps.” Bordelois added it is hard to evaluate a nation. “There is always a difference in what you read and see,” he said. It is his first trip to the U. S. “I want to look, observe and ask questions,” he remarked. Bordelois is president of the National Institute of Agriculture and Livestock Technology (INT and Livestock Technology (INTA) in Argentina. He served formerly as under-secretary of Agriculture and Livestock in the Argentina government and is a former member of the Board of Directors of the Argentine Asso ciation of Agronomists. Bordelois’ trip to A&M repays a visit made to his country last year by A&M President Earl Rudder and Dr. Tyrus R. Timm, professor and head of Agricul ture Economics and Sociology. Several A&M faculty-staff members have visited INTA dur ing the past nine years A&M has worked with the Argentina institute. A&M International Programs Director Dr. Jack D. Gray point ed out Bordelois is responsible for the institute’s agricultural research and extension activities. The U. S. Agency for Interna tional Development has worked closely with the South American country through grant-type pro grams. “These INTA programs have resulted in close contacts with several of our nation’s universi ties,” Gray continued. “Part of Bordelois’ plans include visiting these universities to further these developing relationships.” Society of Range Management. He was high individual in the 1967 State Grass Judging Con test. A veteran Tarrant County 4-H’er for nine years, Sparger is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Sparger. His outstanding record includes such county honors as Junior Boy in 1962, Gold Star Boy in 1965 and Rural Youth of the Month in 1964. Moore, another veteran of nine years as a Taylor County 4-H’er, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl ton C. Moore. An outstanding livestock showman, he exhibited the county grand champion bar- •row in 1964, grand champion Sears boar in the district in 1964 and grand champion Duroc fe- made at the West Texas State Fair in 1966. The youngster also has won numerous honors in grass identification and? dair'y judging. Dockrey and Sparger both plan to study veterinary medicine at Texas A&M University. Moore plans to study petroleum engi neering at Texas A&M while Snow intends to major in agri cultural engineering at the same university. The lady prof is a “cool head” to her students. Several hundred Texas Aggies use the name to describe their marketing professor, Miss Bar bara Davis. And she doesn’t object. Clear proof of the student’s affection for the attractive Ari zonian are the honors they heap ed upon her as the spring semes ter closed. Although she has been teaching at Texas A&M only two years, Miss Davis—it will soon be “doc tor”—received the Civilian Stu dent Council’s Distinguished Fac ulty-Student Relationship Award. A few days later she was named recipient of a Distinguished Serv ice Award from the university’s Memorial Student Center Direc torate. She also stands tall with other faculty members who honored her with an Outstanding Teach ing Award from the College of Business Administration. All of the honors were received within a few weeks of each other. Miss Davis is well-prepared for her teaching role. She is a graduate of the University of Arizona where she earned her bachelor and master’s degrees in marketing. At Northwestern she received a master’s degree in sociology and has completed both course work and dissertation for a Ph.D. The prof likes her students. “I think a person going into teaching has to like students, she remarked. “If the day comes when you hate to go into a class room you should get out of teach ing.” Students offer a special chal lenge to Miss Davis. GRE Scheduled For June 27-28 Seniors expecting to gradu ate in July or August should register by Friday for the Graduate Record Examinations to be given June 27-28. The Counseling and Testing Center will administer the GRE and will notify registrants by mail of the time and place, an-’ nounced Director S. Auston Kerley. “Students who cannot take the Jqne 27-28 tests may reg ister for the national testing program of the Graduate Rec ord Examinations to be given on campus July 12,” he added. National program applica tions are available at the cen ter and must reach the national office in Berkeley, Calif., be fore June 17. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. “Wet get so complacent with ourselves,” she said. “But stu dents ask questions about things we have forgotten. It’s very stimulating.” There appears to be mutual teacher-student trust. “I don’t think the majority of the students are afraid of me,” she continued. Students report their market- BARBARA DAVIS ing prof is willing to talk with them outside of class as well as in the classroom. They feel they are getting a “fair shake.” Miss Davis, who doesn’t look upon her gender as an advantage or disadvantage in the predom inantly male university, admits students are “many times shock ed to find I am a woman.” “Usually I was the only girl in my graduate class,” she smiled, adding, “basically I know how to get along with men.” Active on several student com mittees, Professor Davis feels in- Aggie Grad Gets Highest Award Army 1st Lt. Eloy Garcia Jr. of Laredo, a 1967 Texas A&M graduate, has received the na tion’s highest award for heroism in a non-combat situation. The 5th Cavalry helicopter pilot at Dong Tam in Vietnam was decorated with the Soldier’s Medal for life-saving valor after his craft was hit by enemy fire and crashed in flames on Feb. 28. Lieutenant Garcia “braved in tense heat and imminent danger of explosion to help free the door gunner whose foot was caught in the wreckage,” accord ing to the citation. The 23-year-old 9th Infantry Division officer has been in Southeast Asia since December and also holds the Commendation Medal for heroism and Purple Heart. Garcia studied sociology and psychology at A&M and was in Company H-2 in the corps. volvement offers “a better under standing of the university and its students.” She refuses to label committee activities as “work.” “I get so much out of them . . . so much satisfaction ... I don’t really think of them as work,” she continued. Miss Davis returned to the classroom after two years in business. “I wasn’t getting the fulfill ment I wanted,” she said. Liking the interaction of students from her graduate teaching days, she decided to return to the class room as a teacher. What are her plans ? Simply more teaching assignments! Engineering And Economics Linked What does engineering have to do with the low economic index of the lower Rio Grande Valley ? Nothing, from one point of view, and from another—every thing. “One of the need^s common to the U. S. and foreign nations is in creasing the wealth of those people with marginal incomes,” suggests an interdisciplinary en gineering research team at Tex as A&M. The five graduate students identified and analyzed one of society’s basic needs then u^sed problem solving techniques of engineering to propose a solution. Their proposal describes an in dustry that could be situated in the Valley. Intrusion detection systems manufacturable by semi skilled labor available there would provide a means of alleviating economic problems of the unem ployed or poorly paid. Ideas expressed in the proposal is the first step toward fulfill ment of a prediction made by En gineering Dean Fred J. Benson: that engineers will “take a whack” at social problems. Philosophy of the new industry proposal was expressed by Dr. Charles A. Rodenberger, instruc tor of the engineering course. “If we really want to solve the problems that exist in the U. S. today, we’ve got to look at what causes riots,” he said. Rodenberg er cited poor housing and not enough food which are traceable to lack of income. “The students’ proposal basical ly would provide jobs for person,s of relatively little skill, which would help solve this problem,” the aerospace engineering profes sor added. Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. BB&L —Adv. Outstanding 4-H’ers HonoredAtRoundup