VOLUME 64 Number 69 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 Nixon To Outline Agnew’s Role On U. S. National Strategy | Jn Shaping Domestic Policies r By DAVE BERRY Ten A&'M student leaders hope to return from Dallas tonig-ht with a better understanding of the factors involved in the for mulation of U.S. national strat egy- This was the theme of the Dallas Council on World Affairs which the students attended yes terday and today. They were accompanied by J. Wayne Stark, Memorial Student Center director, and were chosen jointly by Stark, Edwin H. Cooper, Civilian Student Activities direc tor, and Maj. Edmund S. Soly- mosy, assistant commandant. “THESE ARE students who we thought would profit from this experience and who would be able to bring something back to share with their fellow students,” Coop er said. ‘W. W. Lynch, Dallas Power & Light Co. president and an Aggie- Ex, invited A&M to send repre sentatives to the council,” Cooper- continued. “Arrangements were made be forehand for accommodations and admission fees,” Cooper added. ‘The group left early yesterday afternoon to attend the opening dinner.” Co-sponsors of the council were the Dallas Council and the Na tional Strategy Information Cen- Pershing’ Topic For University cture Series “John J. Pershing, A Career of Leadership” is the topic for the Tuesday presentation of the Uni versity Lecture Series, an nounced Dr. Edwin B. Doran Jr., series chairman. Guest speaker for the 8 p.m. program in the Architecture Building auditorium will be Dr. Frank E. Vandiver, chairman of the History Department at Rice. Dr. Vandiver is preparing a multi-volume biography of Gen. John J. (Black Jack) Pershing of World War I fame. The Persh ing family has made available to the Rice professor many of the general’s unpublished writings. In preparing for the biogra phy, Doran noted Vandiver vis ited many of the sites where Pershing won his fame, includ ing the “Western Front” in Eur ope, Pancho Villa’s home ground near Chihuahua, Mexico, and the Phillippines, where Pershing played a major role in combating an insurrection. Privately educated, he received his B.A. degree by examination from the University o/ Texas, where he also earned his master’s degree. He earned his Ph.D. at Tulane. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M. —Adv. ter in New York. Their stated objective was to “bring important information concerning the na tional strategy of the United States to the civilians of Dallas.” EXPERTS WERE invited to speak : and then participate in panel discussions. The topics dis cussed included the freedom of Southeast Asia, intervention and defense in Latin America, Soviet strategy and the Middle East, and the future of U.S. national strat egy. Stark explained that most ma jor cities conduct such “world conferences” to attract interna tional speakers interested in civic affairs. The students who attended the council with Stark were Bennie Sims, MSC Council president; Bill Carter, Student Senate president; Mac Spears, MSC Council vice- president of operations; and Har ry A. Snowdy, Jr., MSC Council vice-president of programs. Also attending were Don Mc- Crory, SCONA chairman; David Maddox, Great Issues chairman; Ronald D. Hinds, Political Forum chairman; Garry P. Mauro, civil ian yell leader; Wayne Gosnell, Issues Committee chairman; and Bert T. Henderson, Election Com mission vice-president. Major Student Denominations Led By Baptists, Catholics Baptists took the lead again as denominational preference among students here, although Catholics edged out the tradi tional second-place Methodists Colleges Plan ‘Career Day’ Next Month The Colleges of Engineering and Agriculture will conduct “Ca reer Day” programs for prospec tive students March 7-8. The College of Veterinary Medicine also has tentative plans for a “Parent Day” and open house in May. Specific date will be determined by completion of facilities in the veterinary medi cine complex. A spokesman for the New Stu dent Weed Committee noted the all-university “Career Day,” nor mally held in the spring, has been changed to fall this year. The College of Engineering, however, will host prospective high school and junior college students, along with parents and teachers, in conjunction with the annual Junior Engineering Tech nical society (JETS) conference March 7-8. Inquiries should be sent to Assistant Engineering Dean J. G. McGuire. The College of Agriculture’s “Career Day” program the same days will include various exhib its in the Plant Sciences Build ing. Similar exhibits will be erected May 3 in G. Rollie White Coliseum in conjunction with the State FFA Livestock Judging. Persons interested in attend ing either of the agricultural programs should contact Dr. R. C. Potts, associate dean of agri culture, noted the committee spokesman. Inquiries about the veterinary medicine program should be for warded to Dr. Edgar D. McMur- ry, assistant veterinary medicine dean, the spokesman added. by one person, according to a YMCA survey compiled by Lo gan Weston, religious life co ordinator and general secretary. From slightly over 12,000 stu dents, 10,736 registered a prefer ence during enrollment for the spring term, said Weston. Baptists led the list of church affiliations with 2,383, with Catholics numbering 2,265 and Methodists 2,264. The figures were less than last semester when Baptists totaled 2,646; Methodists 2,508, and Catholics 2,456. The report remains consistent: with previous years,” said Wes ton. “There are some decreases as well as increases, but they are consistent across the board con sidering a slightly lower student enrollment which is natural dur ing the spring semester.” Other groups remained basic ally the same. Presbyterians fol lowed with 750; Lutherans, 645; Episcopal, 542; Church of Christ, 511; Christian (Disciples of Christ), 323, and Jewish 100. The next highest categories were Moslem, 82; United Church of Christ, 59; Assembly of God, 53; Unitarian, 44; Mormon, 44; Brethren, 34, and Hindu, 31. Weston noted 532 students gave their preference as Protes tant. Other preferences includ ed Christian Science, Greek Or thodox, Nazarene, Pentecostal and Buddhist. BLACKBOARD-BY-WIRE CHECK A Texas Education Agency team completed evaluation Thursday of Creative Application of Technology to Education (Cate) Center programs, for possible state funding. View ing the blackboard-by wire transmitter at the Texas A&M-located center are (standing, left to right) Max Slaughter, Region 6 Service Center director, Huntsville; Mrs. Virginia Cutter, dissemination; Dr. Irene St. Clair, math; A1 Peters, program development, and Sherman Wagner, media, TEA specialists. At the console is Taylor Riedel, A&M Consoli dated superintendent. The school district is funding agent of the center. Man Now Seeking Knowledge Of Ocean’s Deepest Secrets $60,000 Grant Given By NASA The National Aeronautics and Space Administration granted $60,623 to Dr. C. R. Kettlesbor- ough, distinguished A&M profes sor of mechanical engineering, Senator Ralph Yarborough in formed The Battalion Thursday. The grant will study water im pact in the Apollo project. The study will determine, whether the heat shield on the capsule can be altered without harmful effects during re-entry. For centuries, man’s unquench able curiosity and imagination have moved him to extend the geographic limits of his activi ties and the intellectual horizons of his knowledge. Today, with the earth's land areas well mapped and relatively well explored, he has begun to study his planet’s other wilder ness, the ocean. Dr. Earl F. Cook, acting dean of the College of Geosciences, declared. “Scientists now consider the ocean as a great new source of materials and food, as well as a huge sewer into which ultimate ly everything goes,” he said. AS A RESULT, added Cook, it is important to know more about the food chain and produc tivity of the ocean, including WEATHER Saturday — Cloudy to partly cloudy. Wind Northerly 10 to 20 mph. High 68, low 46. Sunday — Partly cloudy. Wind Northerly 10 mph. High 66, low 41. SNOWBOUND AT AN AERIAL CROSSROAD F. Ken- choked airport are seen through the window. More than xcvwtowcveA w\, 'One tor two \Tt0n snow storm closed xowtess Ys^ exA VK? N^ vce^noto') air, relax in TWA lounge. Grounded planes and snow- ocean sediments and how they affect marine ecology and pro vide minerals, sustain drilling platforms and absorb wastes. Equally important is learning ocean currents and chemistry as well as the interactions of the ocean with the atmosphere which produce our weather and our supply of fresh water. Since 1949, A&M has been a leader in the quest for more knowledge about the oceans. For a year and a half, A&M served as the International Geophysical Year World Data Center for Oceanography. A&M also was one of the orig inal 14 participants in the estab lishment of the University Cor poration for Atmospheric Re search 10 years ago at Boulder, Colo., and is a member of the Gulf Universities Research Corp. COOK POINTED out that A&M “has become one of the key centers of oceanographic and meteorological studies in the na tion. Most outstanding, perhaps, are the vast research capabilities to be found on the university’s cam pus, at its Marine Laboratory in Galveston and aboard the 800- ton research vessel, Alaminos. As a result of its broad capa bilities, Cook pointed out A&M can gather “a wide array of oceanographic and meteorologi cal data.” Cook also emphasized that off shore oil platforms are “occa sionally equipped with environ mental sensors for automatic data gathering to provide infor mation of wind speeds and di- Spring ‘Festival’ Opens Tonight With Italian Film “Yesterday, Today and Tomor row,” an award - winning Italian film, will be show at 8 p.m. Fri day in the Memorial Student Center ballroom, Film Commit tee chairman Carlos Almaguer announced Tuesday. Tickets for the Festival can be purchased from the MSC Stu dent Programs Office or the Contemporary Arts Committee. “As in the past, only season tickets are available,” Almaguer said. Student tickets are $3, with non-student, faculty, and date tAckets are going for $5. TViere are no sing\e admission dicVets. rections, air temperature of the sea surface, underwater tem peratures and current speed and direction.” COOK SAID about $1.5 million worth of research is done an nually for the Office of Naval Research in the Gulf of Mexico and adjacent waters. The departments have emerged in a relatively short time as sig nificant contributors to basic en vironmental research, Cook add ed. Contributions include: • Obtaining a better under understanding of the ocean circu lation and thermal structure of the Gulf including the Gulf including the Gulf Stream. • History and structural rela tionships of the bottom and sub bottom geologic formations in the Gulf and Caribbean areas, as well as the composition and soil mechanics properties of the sedi ments in these areas. • The fauna (animal life) of the Gulf and their role in the productivity cycle of the total ecological system. • Feasibility of using remote sensing instruments located in airplanes to study critical ocean ographic parameters. By CARL P. LEUBSDORF Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON UPl — Presi dent Nixon is expected to issue an executive order very shortly detailing the expanded role Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will play in the administration’s do mestic policies. The order is expected to for malize what Nixon has said will be the vice president’s significant duties in coordinating activities among several federal agencies and between the administration and state and local governments. The executive order, it was learned, is likely to include estab lishment of the office of inter governmental relations, through which Agnew hopes to formalize and clarify lines of communica tions between the federal govern ment and other levels. THE creation of the agency, with its own staff responsible to the vice president, formalizes for Agnew the role divided in the Johnson administration by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, and the Office of Emergency Preparedness. Agnew is said to be especially interested in his role as chief co ordinator of federal-state-local relations because of his prior ex perience as governor of Maryland and Baltimore county executive. Those close to the vice presi dent say they are pleased with the way his role has developed since the Nixon administration took over last month. While he has spent considerable time presiding over the Senate and establishing good relations with individual senators, Agnew has also been a regular at the high-level meetings of the Cab inet, National Security Council and Urban Affairs Council. HE presided over the latter group twice last week in Nixon’s absence. Like other vice presidents, Agnew has a Capitol Hill staff, and other staff in the executive office building adjoining the White House. But the vice president himself is quartered in the White House, right next to Nixon’s presidential . office. “He and the President have a pair of working offices, back to back, with an open door policy between them,” an aide said, add ing that “his ideas have been sought right along.” Walter Mote and Frank Da Costa, two key Agnew aides, say that one of the vice president’s main concerns in the first month has been to establish good rela tionships in the Senate. He is the first vice president since Henry Wallace in the early 1940s to come from the post without prior Senate service. As for whether Agnew will be come the chief voice in Congress for Nixon’s forthcoming legisla tive proposals. Mote says “we’ll have to play it by ear.” But he added that “everything indicates it will be a team effort.” A&M Maritime Academy Hurt By Legislature Budget Cuts AUSTIN (Ah — Unless the legislature restores budget cuts, the Texas Maritime Academy’s Pelican Island installation will be like “having a bathroom but no fixtures,” Adm. J. D. Craik said today. The Academy, established in 1962, is part of the Texas A&M University System. Craik, the academy superin tendent, appeared before the House Appropriations Commit tee. The Legislative Budget Board recommendations deleted $734,- 000 that the Galveston school asked to develop the educational buildings and docking facilities being built at Pelican Island. Craik said the Moody Founda tion had given the school $1 mil lion for the Pelican Island in stallation. Craik said the school has grown from 24 students when it opened in 1962 to an enrollment of 145. There were 1,300 appli cations for admission last year, he said. The school operates a four- year bachelor degree program. training its graduates for posts as ship’s officers in the merchant marine. Craik said starting salaries for the school’s graduates run as high as $1,200 a month. He said the state, federal gov ernment and students each bear about one third of the costs of the academy. “Regardless of Vietnam, the shipping companies have had trouble filling officer berths,” Craik said. Rep. Russell Cummings of Houston questioned “w h e t h e r Texas ought to be spending all this tax money (about $960,047 a year now) on a program that is available elsewhere at federal expense.” “If you want to give our Texas lads this opportunity, I don’t know of any better way to do it than the maritime academy,” Craik said. Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. BB &L. —Adv.