'•'•'•ViX" \UON ht its against unter with r e for the Kavanagh i, with Bill eitmann at Niles and post posi- A&M’s Mile Relay Team Sets World Record—Page 4 Che Battalion Vol. 65 No. 71 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Telephone 845-2226 t Saturday jeves, Rex luttlemyer; eeves, Rex d, and Jac- Lee Reeves, d Barrett Henderson ing—Harry eves; Side- cque Strat- myer. Operation Jericho Begins Wednesday \1PANY. 14 3130 CAREFREE MOMENT—Saturday seemed to be a good day to relax as some A&M stu dents and their dates made use of a breeze to get in some kite flying. (Photos by Bob Stump) College Station Planners Approve Subdivision Regs i If, some* IAMC0I k Sptcltlhll l, JR. ve. Bryan LE 0 P. M. REE” fGS” BIG 3 m. INS” m. LS m. ER An ordinance outlining 1 new subdivision regulations was pass- td in its revised form Monday by the College Station Planning and Zoning Commission. The 30-page document, approv ed with 15 revisions, will be for warded to the City Council for final action. The council will set a date for a public hearing on the ordinance before considering it for approval. Codie Wells, chairman of the nine-man plan ning commission, told The Bat- ID Valid in MSC During Military, Civilian Weekends Cadet and civilian students on the seven-day meal plan will be xllowed to eat in the Memorial Student Center Cafeteria on their identification cards during their tespective weekends, according to Pat Wertheim, civilian menu chairman. Wertheim said that students with dates will be allowed to eat four meals from Friday night to Saturday night in the cafeteria. This will apply, he said, to cadets on military weekend and civilians on civilian student week- talion that the council will prob ably set a date for the hearing at its March 30 meeting. Wells said the revisions stem med from meetings of the com mission’s subdivision committee with subdividers and utility com panies. One revision provided that the subdivider be required to install sidewalks in residential and col lector areas. Previously, this re quirement was optional. Commissioners also agreed that high pressure lines installed on public property shall be mark ed by signs installed at each street crossing and at intervals of no more than 300 feet. Before the commissioners voted on the regulation revisions, Clif ford Ransdell, member of the commission, asked if the panel was aware of how much it was adding to the building costs of the developers. Wells replied that according to Federal Housing Authority esti mates, subdividers could actually save 10 to 15 per cent in costs. He explained that the new reg ulations, though they contained a few costly refinements, never theless gave the developer more freedom than under old zoning laws. Wells added that currently de velopers are being allowed to build not only just a house on a lot but a number of houses com posing a group of related blocks. The idea, Wells said, is to en courage developers to build in clusters, saving some costs in constructing houses, but more im portant, getting the developers to plan parks and recreation areas for neighborhoods they build. The commission also passed fi nal subdivision plats for the Sweet Briar Addition and South- wood, Section 8. Library Art Goes on Loan Prints of renowned artists’ paintings will go on loan Thurs day at the A&M library for the spring semester. John B. Smith, acting library director, said the lending print collection may be charged out, one per student, beginning at 2 p.m. The 80 framed, ready-to-hang color prints will become due May 15. Borrowers will be held re sponsible for lost or damaged prints. Replacement cost ranges from $25 to $40. Registration for “Operation Jericho,” a new approach to student-administration communi cations, will begin at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Serpentine Lounge of the Memorial Student Center. A&M student leaders have call ed the three-day conference “a positive and rational approach to the situation of student-adminis tration communications.” Pooling the creative capabili ties of the leaders of the A&M student body leaders into a “think tank,” the program has been structured to achieve three main goals. They are to increase the problem-solving and leader ship abilities of the student body, to stimulate intra-student rela tionships and combat fractional- ism in the student body, to open a new, informal, and two-way channel of communication be tween the administration and the student body. Suggestions and recommenda tions from ‘‘Operation Jericho” will be directed to the administra tion through the Student Senate. Prior to the conference 97 stu dent delegates received a special three-week buildup program un der the direction of Dr. William R. Smith, head of the Psychology Department. The program, developed by Dr. Smith for his doctoral thesis, is designed to cultivate the problem solving and small-group inter action capabilities of the dele gates. Over the three-week period the course has subjected the groups to problems of increasing difficulty with trained observers guiding and counseling the stu dents. The three-day program will center around five main discus sion topics. The first topic, allocations of student monies, will begin at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the MSC As sembly Room. During this session Dean of Students James P. Han- nigan will explain use of student service fees; University Police Chief Ed Powell, police funds; R. C. Diebel, university comp troller, Exchange Store funds; R. T. Bernard, assistant to the president, concession funds; and Donald R. Stafford, assistant dean of students, parking fees. Moderator of the discussion will be A&M Vice President for Busi ness Affairs Tom D. Cherry. “Campus Apathy” will be dis cussed by Senate vice president Kent A. Caperton at 7 p.m. in the Assembly Room. Areas he will consider are the Student Senate, Memorial Student Center, and elections. Academic excellence will be the third topic, scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Thursday in the Assembly Room. The pass fail system will be discussed by Dan C. Lowe, as sistant dean of Business Adminis tration; quality of instructors, Barbara J. Davis, assistant pro fessor, marketing; relevancy of courses, A&M Academic Vice- President Horace R. Byers, who will double as the moderator; and examination procedures and dead week, Dean of Liberal Arts Frank W. R. Hubert. The fourth topic will be intra student relations led by Gerald Geistweidt, Student Senate pres ident. Meeting at 2:15 p.m. Thurs day in the Assembly Room, the sub-topics will be corps-civilian relations, role of the female, po litical minority groups, and social fraternities. Leslie L. Appelt, president elect of the Association of Former Students and a 1941 graduate, will lead discussion on “The Di rections of Texas A&M.” The Houston businessman will discuss student body composition and A&M’s image during the confer ence banquet at 7 p.m. The students will close the conference with discussion ses sions Friday morning. A&M staff members serving as observers during the conference are Dr. B. D. Stone, assistant pro fessor, management; Dr. G. H. Rice, professor, management; Dr. C. A. Phillips, professor, manage ment; Dr. Charles McCandless, assistant dean of Liberal Arts; Dr. H. Monroe, associate profes sor, history; Dr. L. B. Christen sen, assistant professor, psychol ogy; Dr. T. K. Saville, assistant professor, psychology; Dr. L. H. Hope, psychologist, counseling and testing; and Dr. Smith. Others are J. P. Abbott, pro fessor of English; B. J. Adams, professor of management; Diebel; F. K. Nicolas, staff assistant to the commandant; Cherry; Maj. E. S. Solymosy, assistant com mandant; and Maj. H. J. Gibbs, associate professor of military science. Operation Jericho is sponsored by the MSC Leadership Commit tee and is financed by $2,000 in university and student funds. Policy Analyst to Speak Wednesday on Defense Herman Kahn, a physicist and specialist in public policy analy ses, will discuss “Defense and In ternational Relations” here Wed nesday in a Great Issues presen tation. The 8 p.m. presentation will be in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, announced Great Is sues chairman Tom Fitzhugh. Admission is free. Kahn is director and profes sional staff member of the Hud son Institute at Croton-on-Hud- son, New York. As senior officer, he has prin cipal responsibility for the insti tute’s overall research program. Among Kahn’s major interests have been studies on Latin Amer- Rudder’s Condition Remains Serious HOUSTON — A&M President Earl Rudder was continuing to convalesce satisfactorily but was still listed in serious condition this morning, a spokesman for St. Luke’s Hospital said. Assistant administrator Henry C. Reinhard Jr. said Rudder is still being treated in the recovery room following a Feb. 6 operation to relieve a bleeding ulcer. Twen ty-eight hours earlier he had a blood clot removed at Methodist following a cerebral hemorrhage. ican and other development prob lems, inquiries into alternative world futures and long-range (10 to 35 years) political, eco nomics, technological and cultur al changes. His research also has delved into strategic warfare and basic national security policies. Before he left to help found the nine-year-old institute, Kahn was associated with the RAND Corporation where he worked on problems ranging from applied physics and math to particle and radiation diffusion, civil defense and strategic warfare. In 1959 he went on six months leave at the Princeton Center for International Studies to work on the manuscript of “On Thermo nuclear War.” Other books written by Kahn are “Thinking About the Un thinkable,” “On Escalation: Met aphors and Scenarios,” “The Year 2000: A Framework for Specula tion on the Next Thirty-Three Years” and, with institute staff members, “Can We Win in Viet nam?” The Great Issues speaker has written for publications such as Saturday Evening Post, Bulletin of Atomic Scientists and Daeda lus and lectured at virtually all the war colleges, leading U. S. universities, the London School of Economics and defense study centers in six foreign countries. He has been consultant to the 70-’71 Scholarship Forms Being Accepted Applications for 1970-71 under graduate scholarships ranging from $100 to $1,000 will be taken in A&M’s Student Aid Office through the end of March. The 40 awards, excluding de partmental scholarships, are sup ported by individuals, industry, fndowed funds and various sources. Students of several de partments, schools and colleges may qualify, explained Robert M. Logan, student aid director. The 40 scholarships have vari ous selection criteria including the requ rement that the recipient must have been an A&M student one semester or more. Selection criteria range from outstanding academic achieve ment to a combination of aca demic achievement and need for financial assistance, Logan said. Two awards for students enter ing their senior years are based entirely on the individual’s efforts toward financing his own educa tion. “Deserving students should come by and pick up an applica tion,” Logan said. We can’t guarantee him a scholarship but, nothing ventured, nothing gained.” Information about the several awards and application forms will be available in the third floor TCU Freshman Chosen As Sophomore Sweetheart JANICE KAY LANGLEY Texas Christian University freshman Janice Kay Langley of Papillion, Neb., has been selected Sophomore Sweetheart. A brown-eyed, brown-haired el ementary education major, she is the daughter of Lt. Col. (ret.) and Mrs. Harold Langley of 706 Crest Drive in Papillion. She was selected from among five sweetheart finalists at the Sophomore Ball Saturday night. Runners-up included Martha Dun can of Corpus Christi, Rebecca Lee Launer of Houston, Janet Katherine Richardson of Midland, and Susan Richter of New Braun fels. Miss Langley was escorted by cadet John Andrew Kenagy of San Antonio. YMCA office through March 31. Applications must be filed in the student financial aid office by 5 p.m. April 1. Scholarship recipients are se lected by the Faculty Scholarship Committee. Thursday Lecture On Long Canceled Dr. T. Harry Williams has can celled his University Lecture Thursday at Texas A&M because of illness, announced Dr. George M. Krise, chairman of the Uni versity Lectures Committee. Krise said Dr. Williams’ lec ture, “Huey Long and His Poli tics,” will possibly be rescheduled later in the semester. Williams is Boyd Professor of History at Louisiana State Uni versity and author of several highly regarded books, including “Lincoln and His Generals,” a Book-of-the-Month Club selection. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. SMITH ON A DRIVE—Chuck Smith drives past TCU’s Evan Royal for an easy layup late in the second half in the Aggie 77-73 victory over the Homed Frogs in Fort Worth Saturday night. See story, page 4. (Photo by Mike Wright) Gaither Committee on Civil De fense and Strategic Warfare, Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, Atomic Energy Commission, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Office of the Secretary of De fense, among others. Born in 1922, he holds a B.A. degree from UCLA and a mas ter’s in physics from Cal Tech. Coed Adviser Moves into Office Today A&M’s first official counselor for women students is scheduled to move into her new office to day, she told The Battalion Mon day. Mrs. Patricia Self, designated the Graduate Counselor for Fe male Students at A&M, said that her office was in 305 Nagle Hall and that her office hours are: Monday, 12-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m.; Wednesday, 1-5 p.m.; Thursday, 1-5 p.m.; Fri day, 8-11 a.m. and by appoint ment. “I hope that I’ll be able to help university women to become more a part of Texas A&M Uni versity,” she said. “I hope they won’t wait until they have a problem to come by. I’d like for them to drop by anytime and get acquainted.” She said that she would be working towards the publication of a handbook for university wom en and the establishment of an orientation program familiarizing women with the university and the community. “I want to better acquaint uni versity women with helpful and necessary information which is important to them as part of this university,” she said. Mrs. Self was reared in the Boston area, but received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Texas. She previously worked in the counseling center of the Univer sity of Tennessee at Chatanooga doing research for the Tennessee Mental Health Association. She is here working on her doctorate in educational psychol ogy and her husband, Sam, is working on a doctorate in phy sics. WEATHER Wednesday — Clear to partly cloudy. Wind South 10 to 20 m.p.h. High 79, low 49. Thursday — Partly cloudy. Wind South 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 77, low 56. 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