-7 : old fnt n their 'ormancs; -Sts SO fj; OSCAR E. THEIS RT 1 THORMDALE, TEX 76577 5-31-69- Cbc Battalion ngs hart VOLUME 64 Number 68 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 iome aai l games. 'g ‘Creative Thinking 9 Basis Far Pali Sei 9 s New Look >-«, 210 it signed!« I Tuesdi; Creative political thinking is a new science based on one of man’s oldest disciplines. Its adherent, Dr. William C. Sam Hit^Gibbons, professor and chairman f A&M’s Political Science De partment, at 41, is a veteran of American foreign policy decision making, international politics, Congress and methods of political analysis. “We think this is where things are happening,” said Gibbons, who readily predicts “if the trend con- Sales tinues, it looks as if we’ll be the biggest social science department in the university, both in quantity and quality.” GIBBONS also gives reasons for his conclusions. “Political science as it is taught at A&M,” said the former deputy director of the Congressional Liaison Staff of the Agency for International Development in the Department of State, “is really a fascinating area of study.” He admits it is now taught “entirely mpany 846-8 COMBAT COMBO “The Clique,” a Houston-based rock group, will provide music for the Army cadets’ Combat Ball Feb. 28 in Sbisa Hall. Theme of the annual ball, a highlight of Spring Military Weekend, will be “Midnight Patrol of the DMZ.” Application Blanks Available For 1969 Combat Cutie Contest By JANIE WALLACE Battalion Staff Writer Applications are now available for any Army cadet desiring to enter the name of his date in the 1969 Combat Cutie contest, ac cording to Arthur Stites, publici ty chairman for the Combat Ball. A photograph must accompany the completed application. Cadets may pick up applications in Room 123 of Dorm 2 or from each company’s first sergeant. All applications should be turn ed into Room 123 by next Thurs- Spring ‘Festival’ Opens Saturday With Italian Film “Yesterday, Today and Tomor row,” an award-winning Italian film, will be shown at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Memorial Student Center ballroom, Film Committee chairman Carlos Almaguer an nounced Tuesday. “We have 10 films scheduled for the spring series, from seven different countries,” Almaguer said. “Each is a recognized clas sic, and several were recipients of awards from the Motion Pic ture Academy or Cannes Film Festival.” Tickets for the Festival can be purchased from the MSC Student Programs Office or the Contem porary Arts Committee. “As in the past, only season tickets are available,” Almaguer said. Student tickets are $3, with non-student, faculty, and date tickets going for $5. There are no single admission tickets. “Only 400 seats will be avail able in the Ballroom,” Almaguer noted. “Each season we have sold all available tickets within the second week.” day. The selection of the Combat Cutie will highlight the Feb. 28 Combat Ball. “All cadets are urged to enter the names of their dates in the contest,” said Stites. The Combat Cutie will be se lected from finalists chosen by a photograph elimination commit tee. Starting at 9 and lasting until 1, the dance in Sbisa Dining Hall will feature “The Clique” from Houston. Since the theme is a “midnight patrol of the DMZ”, Stites suggests to dates that they dress, if possible, in an Oriental fashion. If not, semi- formals or party dresses are ac ceptable. Dress for Army cadets and Air Force seniors is class C with ascots. Invitations for Army cadets are available through each com pany’s first sergeant. Air Force seniors may pick up their invita tions and tickets in Room 123 of dorm 2 beginning Monday. Stage Center Cast To Give ‘Crucible’ Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. BB&L —Adv. One of the strangest, most aw ful chapters in American history will be dramatized beginning Fri day by StageCenter, the commun ity theater group. It will present Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible” in the Old Bryan Country Club. The play centers around the 17th century Salem witch hunt and trials where hysteric teen age girls accused Puritan towns people of witchcraft. Miller wrote “The Crucible” in 1952 and paral leled the witch hunt to McCarthy’s hunt for communists. Directed by Dr. Lee J. Martin, head of the English Department, the drama will run Friday, Sat urday and Sunday at 8 p. m. The cast features 20 local par ticipants. Tickets, $2, will be sold at the door. Rudder Names Panel different” than it was a few years ago as a branch of history, or law. Gibbons stressed that political science is now “concerned with human behavior rather than dry institutionalism and law.” Students are taking closer looks at the basic political struc ture including who gets power and why, and how, for example, it is maintained. Also military aspects of foreign policy are being evaluated. Gibbons added that students al so get the latest approaches to comparative political systems, in cluding a study of the various political systems around the world and are presented an interdis ciplinary approach to political be havior, plus using the computer. The computer is used for election returns, community surveys and voting behavior studies. THE STUDY of political is one of the oldest of the learned dis ciplines,” said Gibbons. “Since ancient times men have sought to understand how governments have been formed, how politicians behave, how political power is wielded.” “But political science is also as new as the race for the moon, and as relevant to life today as the latest in scientific technolo gy,” he continued. “To study pol itical science is to study Plato and Aristotle, but it is also to study such immediately important questions as who hold power in a community, why men run for office, what is involved in political modernization in the less-devel oped countries.” Gibbons and his faculty, only one-fifth of whom will be over 30 next fall, seek to combine the old with the new, and to blend practical and theoretical ap proaches to the study of politics. A&M, THROUGH GIBBONS, is now a participating member in the Inter-university Consortium for Political Research at the Uni versity of Michigan, which studies general national elections. Re corded on tape and made in appli cation to the community, it “opens a whole new field with quantita tive approaches to politics,” Gib bons stressed. The department’s new curricu lum reflects the progressive Gib bons who once served as profes sional staff member of the Sen ate Democratic Policy Committee and assistant to majority leaders Lyndon Johnson and Mike Mans field. “Modern political science is di rectly related to other social con cepts and techniques, especially sociology and psychology. It’s more scientific, more behavioral and more quantitative, and more less legal and institutional in em phasis,” said Gibbons. The department, which has jumped from 75 undergraduate students last year when it was separated from the history de partment and Gibbons was named head, to 149 currently enrolled, attests to the changes. TEACHING has taken on new meaning. The old way was one of facts and figures of how polit ical institutes operate. The new way at A&M is “to try to teach how to analyze politics,” Gibbons said. The number of undergraduate courses has “almost tripled” in the brief period of time Gibbons has been head, and the number of graduate courses have doubled. A senior seminar “helps seniors capture their whole training by giving them an opportunity to intergrate their learning,” he added. PERHAPS one of the most popular changes, Gibbons emha- sized, is trying to give individual attention to students. Lecture- type sessions are on their way out. To Study Autoreg THE CAMERAS ROLL Three members of a National Broadcasting Company camera crew film the Cadet Corps’ evening formation from atop Duncan Dining Hall. The filmed report, which is expected to appear early next week on the Huntley-Brinkley newscast, is to be part of an exam ination of the problems of ROTC on the nation’s college campuses. Related picture, page 3. (Photo by W. R. Wright) Civilian Committee Favors Joining National Dorm Group “We don’t think that is the way to do it,” he said, calling atten tion to the university “getting so large and impersonal.” Already underway are seminar sessions in advance courses with varying lengths and times of sessions. Some are held at night. “Our students are not just sit ting in the room listening,” Gib bons said. “They are really blos- Three student residence hall observers to the annual National Association of College and Uni versity Residence Halls confer ence in Long Beach will recom mend Friday that A&M apply for membership, according to Pampa senior David Wilks. Wilks, president of the Civilian Student Council, attended NAC- URH with Earyl Roddy of Lan caster, president of Davis-Gary Hall, and Andy Scott, Childress, president of Walton Hall. They were accompanied by Ed Cooper, civilian student activities direc tor. “We will present a resolution to council members asking that we proceed towards becoming members of the national organi zation,” said Wilks, who added that “the program was real good for us.” Sessions were held at California State College. Wilks added that the group, at tending for the first time, was “able to see other residence hall programs at work.” ALTHOUGH the A&M resi dence hall program is a new one, having started September, 1968, in three of 18 civilian dormitories, Wilks said the students agree, “We can’t think of anyone ahead of us.” The three halls—Walton, Davis- Gary and Leggett—have been in volved in the special pilot pro gram. The halls are operating as “clubs” with their own elected officers including disciplinary committees for minor offenses. Similar programs are expected to start soon in other halls, Coop er said. Reflecting on their trip, Wilks said it was evident that Texas universities are “very conserva tive” in relation to hall visita tion and student influence on campus as well as in the selec tion of curriculums. “STUDENTS in the east and west are much more influential,” added Wilks, “but their schools have more problems.” By com parison, A&M has relatively few problems, he noted. Wilks said the group also agreed that A&M has “more of a general philosophy of what a residence hall can do, which has resulted in a sound, livable en vironmental program.” “I’m really happy with the uni versity we have,” emphasized Wilks. Wilks, while not critical, took opportunity to point out, too, that students in the East and West apparently “change for change sake,” looking only at immediate goals and not long-range pro grams. One thing that impressed Wilks at NACURH was the stand its officers took on several issues. Citing an example, he recalled a proposal to support a motion calling for lowering the voting age to 18. Wilks said it “was soundly voted down” as not be ing relevant to residence hall ac tivities. “We feel NACURH is a very responsible student organization,” he said. Does he predict Civilian Stu dent Council officers will approve a proposal to join the ranks of NACURH? “I don’t know. It’s up to all of the guys to decide,” Wilks said. 6 Dormitories Renamed For Medal Winners JOE BUSH 1966 Yell Leader Killed In Vietnam WEATHER “No professor ever uses the same notes a second year,” noted Gibbons, who feels most depart ments should follow the example. Friday — Cloudy. Rainshowers. Winds Southerly 10 to 20 mph. High 71, low 62. Saturday — Cloudy, afternoon rainshowers. Winds Southerly 10 to 20 mph. High 73, low 62. Capt. Joseph Bush, Jr. of Tem ple, 1965-66 head yell leader, was killed in Vietnam Monday from hostile enemy fire, The Battalion learned this week. Funeral arrangements pend at the Harper-Talasek Funeral Home in Temple. A distinguished military stu dent, Bush was a first lieutenant in Company H-2 of the Cadet Corps. Before he married. Bush belonged to Company A-l. He was an accounting major and gradu ated in 1966 with an Army Re serve commission in artillery. Survivors include the widow; a son, Robin, and the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Bush, all of Temple. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M. —Adv. By TOM CURL Battalion Staff Writer A university committee to study the problems of automated registration has been created by A&M President Earl Rudder. The committee will consist of two students each from the Civilian Student Council, Student Senate and Corps of Cadets, the assistant deal and a faculty mem ber from each college. Chairman will be Albert Rein ert, a junior who has been in charge of a study of the new reg istration system for the Student Senate. Ceremonies formally naming six dormitories in honor of the uni versity’s World War II Medal of Honor winners will be held dur ing Military Weekend activities March 1, announced A&M Presi dent Earl Rudder. Rudder said Dr. Eli L. White- ley, A&M’s sole surviving Medal of Honor winner, and families of the other recipients have been invited to visit the newly de signated dormitories and view new bronze plaques placed on the ex terior walls. Earlier in the day, the honorees will be special guests for a lunch eon with student leaders and a Corps of Cadets review. Dr. Whiteley, a native of Georgetown, is associate profes sor of agronomy. The 1942 A&M graduate won his medal in a battle with German SS troops for the fortress city of Sigols- heim, France, Dec. 26, 1944. Four of the awards to A&M students were made posthumous ly. Receiving the medal in this manner were Lloyd H. Hughes, a 1943 graduate from Corpus Chris- ti; George D. Keathley, Olney, 1937; Turney W. Leonard, Dallas, 1942; and Thomas W. Fowler, Wichita Falls, 9143. William G. Harrell, a 1943 grad uate from Mercedes, survived the war but died in 1963. Three of the dormitories named for the Medal of Honor winners are located in the Corps area and three are civilian. Honorees will be escorted to their respec tive dormitories by the ranking cadet or the student holding the top elective post in each of the facilities, Rudder noted. Student leaders in each of the dormitories will host informal receptions for the guests. “I LOOK for some broad im provements in the (automated registration) system,” Reinert said Wednesday night. Reinert has been chairman of a Senate subcommittee that polled students and discussed the regis tration problems with representa tives of the registrar’s office and the computer programmers. Reinert said his conferences with Elliot Bray, one of the computer programmers, has shown that many of the difficul ties encountered with the initial registration last fall will be solved before the next pre-regis tration this spring. “The computer will give prefer ence to those students who turn in their pre-registration forms early,” Reinert commented. HE EXPLAINED that last se mester, the student was put in the section that had the least en rollment at the time the schedule was run through the computer. He added that the add-drop pro cedure that drew so much criti cism will be started earlier next time. Reinert reported that there were more than 11,000 forms processed in the initial pre-regis tration last fall; of these there were 890 rejects. However, 364 were “lunch-hour” conflicts. “The computer was program med to reject any schedule where the student would have to miss his lunch on any day,” he said. MANY STUDENTS complained that their whole schedule was re arranged when they went through the add-drop procedure even though the courses retained should not have been affected. Reinert explained that it costs about one-fourth as much to completely reschedule the student as it does to block out the courses already being taken. He remarked that many people blame the computer for mistakes that it had no control over. Reinert said he thought the committee results would show that most of the blame for mis takes should be placed on the de partmental level rather than on the automated registration sys tem. “If the committee can impress upon the administration that the departments must work more closely with the computer people, the problems can be solved pretty easily,” he said. “I think the people in the de partments were poorly educated on the whole system,” he said. “We’ll be able to utilize the results (of the study) to see which departments had the least problems; and pattern future pro cedure after them,” he concluded. ★ ★ ★ Senator Names 4 Committee Heads Chairmen of four subcommit tees of the Student Senate Com mittee on Educational Procedure and Excellence have been ap pointed by Vice President David Maddox. The subcommittees, each with a specific field of study, are open to any student who is interested in the particular subject. The subcommittees, chairmen, and their telephone numbers are; 1. Pass-Fail, Garry Mauro, 845-5780. 2. Professor and Course Eval uation, John Allen, 846-3968. 3. Curriculum Reforms, A1 Reinert, 845-1050. 4. Experimental Teaching Methods, Phil Morley, 846-8348.