m G. Ei Che Battalion Mild and cloudy Vol. 66 No. 68 College Station, Texas Thursday, January 28, 1971 FRIDAY — Partly cloudy to cloudy. Winds Southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 72, low 51. SATURDAY — Partly cloudy. Winds Northerly 10 m.p.h. High 68, low 42. 845-2226 .... . WHAT LOOKS LIKE beach fun is really serious business dumped when two Standard Oil Co. tankers collided last as volunteers attempt to clean up the beaches and rocks week has moved out the Golden Gate into the Pacific Ocean, in San Francisco Bay. Most of the 840,000 gallons of oil (AP Wirephoto) I Goode! 1 will ‘roundup’ SCONA Jm Former U. S. Sen. Charles E. Goodell will be round-up speaker for the 16th Student Conference on National Affairs (SCONA) here Feb. 17-20. The conference involving stu dents from across the U. S., Mex ico and Canada will deal with “Student Responsibilities in the ’70s.” Goodell will be jointly sponsor ed for the Texas A&M appear ance by Great Issues, Political Forum and SCONA, normally un related committees of the Me morial Student Center Director ate. “It is the first time the com mittees have cooperated on a speaker,” commented Dave May- field of Waco, SCONA XVI chair man. James W. Russell III of An- nandale, Va., chairs Great Issues. Charles R. Hoffman of Greenbelt, Md., heads Political Forum. Goodell broke with the Nixon Adm(inistration during his two years in the Senate. He made a fighting speech asking for enact ment of his anti-war amendment, among other Senate work not aligned with White House think ing. “Mr. Goodell, New York Mayor John Lindsay and former Interior Secretary Walter Hickel wear the Republican label without buying Washington programs,” Mayfield Schools research artificial arms, legs An inter-institutional research program for improving artificial legs and arms and other devices for physically handicapped per sons, recently funded by the Vet erans Administration in the amount of $53,851 for the first 8-month period, involves research ers and consultants from Texas A&M, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Institute for Rehabilitation and Research, and the Veterans Hospital at Houston. The principal investigator is Dr. Paul H. Newell, director of Texas A&M’s Biomedical Engi neering Program. Dr. Lewis A. Leavitt, chairman of the Depart ment of Physical Medicine at Baylor and the Texas Institute for Rehabilitation and Research, is co-principal investigator. Newell said the research effort will be directed toward meeting needs of handicapped individuals in attaining rapid and more com plete rehabilitation. The methods of analysis, design, clinical test ing and team evaluation will be employed by integrating the tal ents and knowledge of engineers, physicians, and medical scientists from the cooperating institutions. Prosthetic and orthotic appli ances presently in use are bulky and in many cases severely over restrain the patient’s residual functions, Newell said. The research team believes the technology exists to design light er, stronger composite structures which are more functional and have improved cosmetic qualities, he continued. Other Texas A&M personnel University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” Adv. participating in the work are Dr. Douglas Bynum, assistant re search engineer; Dr. H. R. Thorn ton, associate professor of me chanical engineering; J. F. Ev- ertson and Harvey O. Fleisher, research assistants; and George Hancock, technician. Consultants are Dr. William P. Blocker, Veterans Administration, Dr. William A. Spencer and Thor- kild J. Engen, Texas Institute of Rehabilitation and Research, Dr. Leslie A. Geddes, Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. James D. Mc- Crady, Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine, and Alvin L. Muilenberg, Prosthetist. commented. Because of the New York Re publican’s Senate stand and re- election defeat by the so-called “establishment,” students have rallied to Goodell. A Phi Beta Kappa and cum laude graduate of Williams Col lege, he holds a law degree from Yale and a master’s from the Yale Graduate School of Government. Goodell is a Navy veteran of World War II and an Air Force veteran of the Korean conflict. The New York native served nine years in the U. S. House of Representatives before Senate appointment in September, 1968. In becoming the No. 1 target of Vice President Agnew and the administration, Goodell lost the Senate seat race to third party candidate James Buckley. Goodell left an imprint on “ma jor domestic and international is sues of a man whose positions were clear cut, deeply and sin cerely held and expressive of the progressive spirit which has char acterized all the best Senators of either party in modern times,” stated New York’s senior Sena tor Jacob Javits. Javits pointed out that Goodell departed from usual freshman Senator custom of political pur suits and fence-mending, putting his time instead to facing “the most troubling issues of our time.” Goodell’s work and voting rec ord on urban areas aid, education, poverty programs and foreign, economic and environment-natur al resources policy as well as his anti-war stand won him support of the young, and Agnew’s attack. He has been quoted by United Press International as saying that President Nixon’s actions are goading Republican liberals into battling him for the 1972 nomina tion, an idea with which Goodell himself is flirting. The former Senator’s confer ence speech Saturday, Feb. 10, will provide a consensus state ment of what SCONA XVI has said about student responsibilities and input on national and inter national issues through political, educational, economic and social systems. Mayfield said the MSC ball room event will be open to the public. Other key SCONA speak ers, including Ross Perot and U. S. Senator Birch Bayh, may also be heard by all interested persons. Ethnic seminar opens Monday The first two speakers in the Ethnic Studies Seminar of the Great Issues Committee — Dr. Carlos E. Cortes and Dr. Kenneth G. Goode — will be presented Monday and Wednesday at Texas A&M. Cortes, chairman of Latin American studies at the Univer sity of California at Riverside, will speak Monday on “Unrest in Aztlan: The Chicano Movement in Historical Perspective.” “Blacks in American History” will be the topic of Goode’s Wed nesday address. Each presenta tion in the ethnic studies series will be at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center ballroom, an nounced seminar chairman Patri cia Lucey of Bryan. Future topics will include the blacks’ changing status, American Indians’ self-determination, black militant movement origins and progress and where the movement is heading. The seminar continues through April 26. “The program has been de signed to explore cultural and political problems of our minori ties, in light of their history, with emphasis on the Black American,” Miss Lucey said. “The program’s purpose is to ‘bring home’ the significance of these problems to Texas A&M students and people of the Bryan-College Station com munity.” In addition to chairing Latin American studies at Riverside, Dr. Cortes also is contributing editor for “Aztlan: Chicano Jour nal of the Social Sciences and Arts.” He has authored numerous books, among them “Black,” “Mexican Americans,” “Indians,” “Puerto Ricans” and “History of Mexican American Resistance and Revolution.” Goode is vice chancellor for special projects at the Univesity of California at Berkeley. He also is vice-chairman of the Urban Redevelopment Agency at Berke ley. His memberships include the American Academy of Social and Political Science and the Associa tion of the Study of Negro Life and Culture. Goode’s byline ap pears on books titled “From Afri ca to the United States and Then” and “Current Afro-American Po litical and Social Thought.” He was a Political Forum speaker here last spring. Miss Lucey noted that admis sion to the six Ethnic Studies Seminar presentations is free to all interested individuals. Great Issues programs are supported through patronage subscriptions. CBS recompense ‘hearsay’: Boone “It’s all hearsay,” says Robert Boone, director of the Singing Cadets, of the rumors that Ed Sullivan and CBS would compensate the group for its missed solo performance Sunday night. Boone admitted that something may be done, but that he had no way of knowing how or when such action may be taken. He said that a story in the Wednesday issue of The Daily Eagle, which quoted him as saying that Sullivan and CBS claimed they would make adjustments, was “completely wrong, completely misleading.” The Daily Eagle also said that the originally planned solo spot was cut out because the jazz group preceding them ran two minutes and 10 seconds overtime. CBS officials did not cut the jazz group short because they were afraid of a reaction on the part of “partisians” in the audience, the article said. Girls 9 dorm board topic Women’s housing at A&M will be a major topic during the upcoming Board of Directors meeting February 23, announced President Dr. Jack K. Williams Wednesday. Commenting that it is still too early to know what topics would be discussed by board members, Williams said that suitable housing for women on A&M’s campus would be given much thought. “I understand that the general feelings of the board members is favorable toward women’s housing,” Williams said. He said that much planning will go into it before something is decided upon. “They only want the highest quality and only first class housing for the young ladies,” he added. He mentioned the possibility of using the new dormitory or at least part of it which is now under construction just east of the corps dormitory area. “Many plans will be looked at and studied. There are many factors to be studied before deciding to use the new dormitory for women students,” he said. Student finds, returns $4,200 Charles E. Goodell Everybody makes mistakes, but sophomore Mike Patillo of Alpine was honest about one that saved a College Station merchant $4,200. Mike went to Loupot’s Trading Post to purchase a textbook. When he got home he found a money bag in his little brown bag, but no book. “I don’t see that kind of money very often,” Patillo admitted. “And I was afraid to touch it.” He did find a deposit slip among the cash and checks. When he entered Lou’s store to return the bag the place was full of police, he reported. “What type of cool thing can a guy say holding a bag full of money?” Mike asked. One of the female clerks rushed to him and hugged the Company H-2 cadet joyfully. “It sure made me feel good to see the look on that girl’s face. She was really relieved.” The clerk either gave Mike the brown sack with the bank deposit bag inside or he picked it up by accident. Mike admits he can’t re member what happened. Police officers thought the whole affair was funny and J. E. Loupot, the store owner, figures Patillo is a hero. Mike disagrees. “It was something any good Aggie would do,” he said. Youth poll picks Kennedy in 9 72 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The top social concerns troubl ing American youths are the war in Vietnam, environmental pollu tion, drug abuse and racial in- justic, according to a survey re- Group actions lab goal Dr. Paul P. Van Riper By BRUCE BLACK Plans are under way for a lab oratory which would study group reactions, Dr. Paul P. Van Riper, head of the Political Science De partment, said Wednesday. “We need a laboratory where it would be possible to hold simu lation and small group experi mentation, including individual work with the computer through a remote terminal,” he said. “There are half a dozen such laboratories already in existence,” he continued, “including facilities at the University of Minnesota and at Wayne State University in Detroit.” Van Riper was named depart ment head in July, 1970, after coming to A&M from Cornell University, where he was secre tary and chief administrative of ficer of the Cornell Constituent Assembly concerned with the re organization of the university. At present, the Political Science Department lacks the space for such a laboratory, he said, but plans are underway to move the department into Bolton Hall, along with the Sociology Depart ment, as soon as the new En gineering Building is completed. Political science and sociology have a lot in common as far as lab work goes,” Van Riper said. “I’d like to see the two depart ments get together on the lab project.” The main problem is in finding a person who has had direct ex perience with such a laboratory who could act as a lab designer and manager. While many of the faculty know the principles be hind the lab, no one has had any direct contact with such facilities, he said. Another problem in the Politi cal Science Department is that at present, a master’s is the high est degree offered in the subject at A&M, Van Riper said. “I hope that we can obtain Ph.D. status within the next few years,” he said, “but at present the supply is much greater than the demand for Ph.D.’s in the academic world, and we cannot be granted such a status at this time.” He commented that he believes the department is now ready to fulfill all requirements for the Ph.D. Since Van Riper’s arrival in July, he has made advances in other areas as well. He recently revised the policy in teaching Po litical Science 266 and 207, re quired courses for most students. “We have eliminated all grad uate students from teaching the courses,” he said, “and now every body on the faculty handles at least one section of 206 or 207, so the students will have access to as much of the staff as pos sible.” Van Riper says he would like to develop courses in civil-mil itary relations, as well as in science and government policy. leased Wednesday by Seventeen magazine. The poll said young people’s choice for president in 1972 would be Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- Mass., with 20 per cent of those interviewed, followed by Presi dent Nixon and former Sen. Eu gene J. McCarthy, D-Wis. Interviews with 2,000 boys and girls aged 14 to 22 reported that most describe themselves as “hap py” and “active,” and consider personal freedom to be the na tion’s top asset. But three out of four believe there is really some thing basically wrong with Amer ican society. Almost all said the government was not spending enough to curb pollution; most fault the govern ment for lack of funds to help combat poverty, urban problems and educational needs. More than half feel “somewhat hopeful” about the nation’s fu ture. Nearly eight out of 10 inter viewed do not agree that “vio lence may be the only way to achieve needed changes in so ciety.” On other issues, the high school and college-age youth opted for more liberal abortion laws, strict er gun control legislation, lower ing the voting age to 18 and es tablishing an all-volunteer army. They opposed the legalization of marijuana and most said they did not think the Black Panthers were being persecuted in this country.