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I® has dniin- and as a Che Battalion Vol. 65 No. 1 College Station, Texas Wednesday, September 10, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 Rudder Sees Cadet Corps As First Target of ‘Kooks’ Babes If — The Corps of Cadets will be the No. 1 target of “kooks, anti-mili tarists and just plain lousy Amer icans this year,” President Earl Rudder warned 1969-70 cadet leaders Monday. “Meeting their attack is pri marily up to you,” the president challenged, “but I guarantee you won’t walk alone.” The attack will come from everywhere, “from within and without,” he added. “There are people in this nation—and on this campus — who would wipe ROTC off the face of the earth.” AM’s record as a source of officers during two world wars, the Korean and Vietnam conflicts is one of the reasons the univer sity will be in the dissidents’ sights. “A&M’s stability is known throughout the world,” Rudder stated, citing an article in the London Mirror. Credit and re sponsibility for maintaining it re sides primarily with the corps of cadets, he said. Activities of dissidents, corps responses, effects on the univer sity and nation, summer develop ments and goals for the school year were discussed with 250 sen iors and juniors. They checked in a week ahead of the fall semester start of classes. About a third of the expected 1,100 new corps members reported Sunday. Other freshmen arrive Wednesday and upperclassmen return Friday for the Monday, Sept. 15, school year start. Key corps officers headed by Corps Commander Matthew R. Carroll of Annandale, Va., and Deputy Commander George I. Mason of San Antonio were at the Monday commanders confer ence. (See picture, page 9.) Commenting on the “upside down condition of the world to day,” Rudder told the newly com missioned cadet officers “you are needed this year by your univer sity more than ever before. No one has in his hands any more than you the status of A&M and the university's education this year of 14,000 students.” “If seed sown among us by dissidents falls on fertile ground, we’re going to have a sorry year,” the president observed. “If the dissension falls on thistles, thorns and rocky ground, the year will be great.” Problems can be expected, he added, but attitudes should par allel that of the Apollo 11 astro nauts when asked about a dan gerous part of their mission. “They said “yes, that’s going to be an interesting situation’,” Rudder observed. “You and I are (See Rudder, page 2) a '-4 •P* r % * A&M President Earl Rudder is worried First $115 Million Budget Approved By Directors Bellbottoms... Mi A record $115,474,550 operat ing budget for the Texas A&M University System for 1969-70 was approved today by its board of directors, subject to availability of funds. The new budget represents a 13 per cent increase over the previous year, with all major di visions receiving operating in creases. Contracts totaling $377,944 were awarded for eight construc tion projects and $212,098 was appropriated for six additional undertakings. Included in the appropriations was $24,998 to purchase 50 acres of land for establishment of a new research and extension cen ter at San Angelo. The board also confirmed ap pointment of Dr. John C. Cal houn Jr., as A&M vice president for programs, giving him addi tional responsibilities as the uni versity’s dean of geosciences. The position has been filled the past year by Dr. Earl F. Coow, asso ciate dean. Tentative operating budgets for various divisions within the Texas A&M system are: Texas A&M, 58,416,790; Prairie View, $10,508,102; Tarleton State, $4,- 060,565, and the Texas Maritime Academy, $805,521. Also the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, $14,354,208; Texas Agricultural Extension Service, $12,923,017; Texas Engi neering Experiment Station (in- New Student Week Starts With Assembly Tonight Beards — WESBBk A general assembly at 7:30 to night will begin the university’s New Student Week Program. Dean of Students James P. Hannigan will preside at the G. Rollie White Coliseum meeting for all new students, the first meeting of a three-day program. President Earl Rudder will make the welcoming address. Other speakers include Harry A. Snowdy, Corps chaplain; Ger ald Geistweidt, Student Senate president, and Robert Boone, di rector of the Singing Cadets, will be in charge of entertainment. Starting at 8 a.m. Thursday, assemblies will be held by each college where the new students will hear talks about their major course of study and meet with the college’s dean. The schedule of assemblies in cludes: Agriculture majors meet in Physics Building, Room 321, Dr. R. C. Potts presiding; archi tecture students meet in Archi tecture Building, Lecture Room, James A. Foster presiding; busi ness majors meet in Biological Sciences Building, Lecture Room, Prof. Dan C. Lowe presiding; ed ucation majors meet in Memorial Student Center Ballroom, Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert presiding. Also, engineering majors meet in G. Rollie White Coliseum, Dr. C. H. Ransdell presiding; geosci ences majors meet in Geology Building, Room 105, Dr. Edwin Doran presiding; liberal arts ma jors meet in Guion Hall, Dr. Charles E. McCandless presiding; science majors meet in Chemistry Building, Lecture Room, Prof. J. B. Backham presiding; pre-vet- erinary medicine majors, meet in Veterinary Medicine Building Auditorium, Dr. E. D. McMurry presiding; Texas Maritime Acad emy majors meet in Physics Building, Room 145. Another general assembly will be held at 1:15 p.m. Thursday with Dean Hannigan presiding. Topics to be presented include “Student Life at Texas A&M University” and “Student Activ ity Programs.” All civilian students will meet with resident hall advisers in their halls at 3 p.m. A church assembly will start at 7 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coli seum, sponsored by the YMCA. Logan Weston, coordinator of re ligious life and YMCA general secretary, will preside with open houses at local churches to fol low the assembly. Cadet Corps unit meetings and residence hall meetings begin at 9:30 a.m. Friday. Open house at the Memorial Student Center will begin at 6:30 p.m. Friday. President and Mrs. Rudder, university officials and MSC stu dent leaders will meet the new students, their parents and friends. Organization of the Corps of Cadets will be held from 8 a.m. until noon Saturday. An orientation for all coeds will be held from 10 a.m. until noon in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. eluding the Texas Transporta tion Institute), $6,895,058; Texas Engineering Extension Service, $1,348,023; Texas Forest Service, $2,701,884 and the Rodent and Predatory Animal Control Serv ice, $570,708. System offices and departments, the only category showing a decrease, received the remaining $2,890,674. The Marley Co. of Kansas City received a $95,090 contract to provide cooling towers for the central utilities plant addition at A&M. A Houston firm, Ingersoll- Rand Co., was awarded two con tracts totaling $92,108 for chilled water and boiler feed pumps with drivers for the utilities plant addition. Sentry Construction Co. of Bryan won a $70,057 contract to build a poultry disease research laboratory at A&M. Another Bryan firm, S&H Plumbing Co., was the successful! bidder for a $50,974 addition to the universi ty’s sanitary sewer system. Other awards included $27,588 to Walter Droemer General Con tractors of Giddings for construc tion of an agronomy field crop laboratory at A&M; $24,910 to Scientific Systems Corp. of Bat on Rouge for bioassay and sol vent storage cool rooms at A&M’s Biological Sciences Build ing, and $18,216 to TUSHA Buildings, Inc. of Lubock, new greenhouse for the Agricultural Research and Extension Center at Lubbock. Appropriations included $50,- 000 for preliminary design of a new office and classroom build ing at Texas A&M, and $4,000 for design of a staging area for oceanographic research vessels at A&M’s Mitchell campus in Gal veston. The board approved the uni versity’s request to seek state authorization to offer new under graduate degree programs in technical education and envir onmental design. Off Campus Housing Need Said ‘Urgent’ by University Officials The university has “an urgent need” for off-campus housing for single and married students. Housing Manager Allan M. Madeley reports current needs are about 100 rooms for single students and 200 apartments or houses for married students. “The housing office urges any one with any type of rooms, apartments or houses to call us the listing,” Madeley stressed. However, he emphasized that the dwellings must be in good condition and suitable for living. “The university will be able to provide on-campus housing for most single undergraduates,” Madeley said. “Our main con cern is finding suitable housing for graduate students and mar ried students.” Madeley also asks that persons who have had listings with the office, and rented, to please call so his office can take that listing off the list. “There is no need to re-list housing that was listed during August,” Madeley said. “We still have current listings on file.” Changing the Rules on Student Radicals College Presidents Getting Tougher Billiards. Back to Books (Front Page Photos by Bob Stump) WASHINGTON UP) —Radicals warming up for a new round of student upheavals can expect to find tougher ground rules on cam pus this fall. A nationwide Associated Press survey shows that university and college administrators, once help lessly baffled by violence behind ivy-covered walls, now are de termined to deal decisively and firmly with forces seeking to ob struct the normal life of the aca demic community. At the same time, the survey discloses that administrators have taken steps to accommodate con structive student demands for University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. more involvement in the day-to- day conduct of college and uni versity affairs. Other survey findings: —Across the country there’s been a loosening of restrictive campus regulations, such as rules forbidding men students from visiting coeds in dormitories. —An increasing number of in stitutions are moving to offer more opportunities to minority groups, and to widen the field of black students. —Campus security forces have been beefed up at many schools. Administrators say they will rely more on court orders, such as in junctions, to curb radical activ ists. And many say they won’t hesitate to call police onto cam pus when necessary. On a majority of the campuses, students this fall will be filling places on faculty and adminis trative councils previously off limits to them, according to a poll by the American Association of State Colleges and Univer sities. No administrator will predict, however, that these and other changes already put into effect are enough to head off disruption. What emerges most strongly in the AP survey is the determina tion of administrators to avoid the image of the university presi dent powerless in his own domain when violence strikes. The stiffening attitude is re flected in beefed up security forces at many institutions. The University of Maryland, for example, has installed a se curity supervisor with a back ground of work in police. He has a campus force of 47 officers and says he would like to add 10 more. The University of Texas has increased its security force “part ly because of our growth and partly because we want to be ready for anything,” says a uni versity spokesman. The force in cludes some 50 officers trained in FBI-sponsored schools for peace officers. Temple University in Philadel phia, which once relied on retired men hired through a detective agency, has formed its own 125- man security staff. A bombing incident led officials at Claremont Colleges—a cluster of six private institutions 40 miles from Los Angeles—to increase campus security patrols by two men bringing the total to 16. Reflecting public impatience with recurring waves of campus turmoil is a series of bills passed in 20 state legislatures in the past four months. Most of these measures prohib it blocking buildings, interfering with classes and intimidating members of the university com munity. Illustrative of the tougher poli cies laid down by university administrators is a new set of (See Presidents, page 2) Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. BBAaL —Adv.