Warm, breezy, clear Cbt Battalion Vol. 66 No. 78 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 16, 1971 WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY Cloudy to partly cloudy after noon rain and thundershowers. Winds Southerly at 10 to 20 m.p.h. High 77, low 64. 845-2226 SCONA activities will begin Thursday NEW BAND SWEETHEART Karen Litzmann of Columbus dances with Lt. Col. (ret.) E. V. Adams, band director, during' the annual Aggie Band Dance Saturday night. A high school drum major, Miss Litzmann was selected from five finalists. Adams was hon ored by bandsmen for his 25 years as band director. Student inputs and effects on society through politics, educa tion, economics and social points go under the microscope of the 16th Student Conference on Na tional Affairs here this week. Focus on “Student Responsibili ties in the 1970s” will be obtained through mind-to-mind contact be tween students of the U. S., Mex ico and Canada and eminent lead ers in government, business and scholarly fields. More than 200 conferees from 71 U. S. colleges and universities, eight in Mexico and one in Canada register Wednesday morning for the four-day SCONA XVI. SCONA Chairman Dave May- field said the time-tested method of key speakers’ and panels’ ideas being elaborated and and ex panded in roundtable discussions cochaired by prominent national civic and foreign government of ficials and educators will be em ployed. Keynote and plenary session addresses are open to the public, said vice chairman Ben Thurman. He added that the Saturday morn ing wrapup presentation by ad- ministration-bucking former New York Sen. Charles Goodell is jointly sponsored by SCONA, Great Issues and Political Forum. Progressive philanthropist H. Ross Perot, who was named one of the top Freedom Foundation honorees Monday, will speak at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. An 8 p.m. Wednesday session will present Health, Education and Welfare youth and student affairs official Stanley B. Thomas in the second keynote address. Sen. Birch Bayh, Indiana Demo crat known for legislative work in foreign policy and environment improvement, will speak at the third plenary session Thursday at 1:30 p.m. A Thursday night panel con sisting of student body presidents John Gaventa of Vanderbilt Uni versity and Kent Caperton of Texas A&M, and David A. Ifshin, National Student Association president of Washington, D. C., will be moderated by Dr. Frank E. Vandiver. The Friday schedule features former astronaut and airline executive Frank Borman and Dr. Allen B. Mandelstamm, Michigan State University economist, at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., respectively. Goodell’s 10:15 a.m. Saturday summarization of SCONA XVI also will be held in the MSC Ball room. Mayfield said that more than 10 hours of roundtable sessions are scheduled. Thursday activities will include a 5 p.m. Corps of Cadets review, smorgasbord and Singing Cadet performance. Dele gates, including 70 from Texas A&M, will dine with the Corps of Cadets Friday evening. ‘Experienced’ schools said they could not afford trip New professor evaluation near By FRAN ZUPAN A number of nationally known schools which have experienced student unrest turned down invi tations to the 16th Student Con ference on National Affairs be cause they couldn’t afford to send delegates, SCONA Chairman H. Davis Mayfield III told The Bat talion Monday night. Berkeley, Columbia, Harvard, Yale, Kent State University and the University of Wisconsin, among others, all refused invita tions to the conference on “Stu dent Responsibilities in the Seven ties” which starts Wednesday, saying, “the trip is too far to send delegates,” Mayfield said. Mayfield said there have been budget cutbacks at many schools due to financial problems. The SCONA Planning Commit tee invited twice as many schools as accepted, Mayfield said. He explained: “Schools were invited on more or less two bases—schools which have been invited in the past and other schools which would send delegates with meaningful contri butions. We aimed for a geo graphical cross-sdction outside Texas.” He said the number of students from a school in Texas is based on the enrollment at that school and its distance from A&M. Mayfield said schools sending delegations to the conference that did not send one last year includes San Francisco State, Jackson State, Davidson, Vanderbilt, Uni versity of North Carolina, Uni versity of Georgia and Mary Baldwin College. Mayfield said schools were sent a letter of invitation from A&M President Jack K. Williams re questing that they send student body presidents or students in student government since the con ferences is “aimed at this type.” He added that there would defi nitely be a “balance of view points” at the conference. By FRAN ZUPAN Battalion Managing Editor The computer and a more ana lytical set of questions may be the tool for evaluating A&M teachers in the not too distant future, a Liberal Arts Student Council senior on the Teaching Excellence Committee told a group of liberal arts students Monday night. The technique was tried on over 500 students in the College of Liberal Arts last semester, John ny Smith of sociology said, and it will be offered to all colleges for their classes at the end of this semester. Smith has been working on the project with Dr. Anthony E. Bour geois, head of the subcommittee in charge. The test, in which the student would give teachers, textbooks, environment and facilities ratings from one for a high evaluation to seven for the lowest, was cut from 63 to about 40 questions in the trial run. Questions are valued differently, depending on prede termined importance of questions. Waring’s here for The computer tabulates the re sults. The difference in this method and the questionnaires now used is in the type of questions. There are two sections of the evaluation. In the first part the student gives his ratings on course work, teach ers and facilities. These questions range from, “I would not recom mend this teacher to a friend,” to, “This course has required a great deal more time and effort than other courses at the same level.” In the second part of the evalu ation, the student gives the in structor information about him self such as his grade point ratio and sex. This is to help the teach er evaluate the evaluation, Smith said. The teacher would be given the completed evaluations and results for his own use and would not be required to show them to any one, Smith said. Approval by the Liberal Arts College faculty would make the method a reality, ,Smith said. In other Liberal Arts Student Council business, the council voted to submit a recommendation to Liberal Arts Dean W. David Max well, requesting that grade slips, both midsemester and final ( be sent to the student, in addition to his parents. The recommendation, written by Dean Boyd, junior in economics, states that six copies of grade slips are made. The sixth copy is sent to the student’s high school his freshman year, but is not after that, the recommenda tion says. “Since these grades are wholly the result of his (the student’s) effort,” it states, “he is most en titled to them.” Rebecca Kirby, modern lan guage senior reported on the Lib eral Arts Faculty Advisory Coun cil meeting over semester break. This council approved course rec ommendations for independent study programs in the English and Philosophy departments. The courses numbered 497 in both departments, could be repeated once for credit. Curriculum changes must now Pennsylvanians concert tonight be approved by the University Curriculum Committee, the Ex ecutive Committee, the Academic Council, the Board of Directors and the Co-ordinating Board. If the head of a student’s de partment approved, the student could take these courses and prob lems courses (485), Miss Kirby said. There was no report from the committee appointed to explore possibilities for improvement in teaching methods and facilities of the Modern Language Depart ment, Michael Hardin history junior said. Corps march honors guests Texas A&M’s Corps of Cadets will go on review Thursday before delegates to the 16th Student Conference on National Affairs. The 5 p.m. event on the Memorial Student Center drill field will be the 2,343-member corps’ first review of the spring semester. Army Col. Jim H. McCoy, commandant, and Air Force Col. Keith C. Hanna, professor of aerospace studies, will review the troops. Requested by SCONA XVI leaders, the review ties in with the 1971 conference, “Student Responsi bilities in the ’70’s” said chairman Dave Mayfield. Topics to be discussed during SCONA XVI are student roles in politics, education, economics and society, he said. Military aspects will be naturally infused through the review and delegates taking the Friday evening meal with the corps. Corps Commander Van H. Taylor will lead units from the 12-dorm area at 4:40 p.m. Adjutant’s call will sound at 5 p.m. “Weather played a major part in cancelling the SCONA review when conference was held in December,” McCoy said. “At this time of the year, we look forward to having the review after the planning that goes into it.” Rain rubbed out the SCONA XV review in December, 1969. Vice presidents announced for MSC By FRAN ZUPAN Battalion Managing Editor Accounting junior A1 Bradley was elected executive vice presi dent of the 22nd Memorial Stu dent Center (MSC) Council and Directorate Monday night. Other vice presidents elected for 1971-72 are Vice President for Operations—Sam Walser, history sophomore; Vice President for Recreation — Wade Seidel, man agement sophomore; Vice Presi dent for Issues — Patricia Lucey, marketing sophomore; and Vice President for Programs — Keith Kauffman, electrical engineering sophomore. suit personalities and problems” of various committees, MSC Pres ident Tom Fitzhugh said. The Black Awareness Commit tee (BAG) now will be categor ized with the issues committees— Great Issues, Political Forum and SCONA. The BAG was under pro grams. The Contemporary Arts Committee and Leadership Com mittee have been placed under programs with Town Hall, Aggie Cinema, the Basement and Host and Fashion Committee. The Travel Committee has been moved from programs to recreation, which includes Camera, Chess and Radio Committees and New Tra dition Singers. g.p.r. of 2.40 or have a g.p.r. of 2.65 for the two previous semes ters. The Council also approved a measure which will reduce the number of awards presented at the Awards Banquet. Only one outstanding class award will be given per class (freshman, sophomore and junior classes only). Previously three awards could be given per class. Only five distinguished service awards, instead of 12, can be given. Appreciation awards will be given at the committee level rather than at the banquet. In addition, the Council will give one Lawrence Sullivan Ross Award, one Thomas H. Rountree Award, and one Elizabeth Todd Chapman Award. The Chapman Award will be given this year only to a person who has made an outstanding contribution to the MSC in the spirit of Elizabeth Todd Chapman. Fashion show set The Fred Waring-Pennsylvani- ans Show comes to A&M tonight. The show will go on stage in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 8 in a Rotary-Town Hall crossover. Town Hall Chairman Bill Left- wich said Rotary ticket holders will have reserved seats in rows 1 to 15 on the coliseum floor and row 1 to 15 in west balcony sec tion 107. Town Hall season tickets and student activity cards will get unreserved seat admission at no extra charge. Fred Waring, stricken recently by heart attack and in recupera tion at home, has the Pennsyl vanians in their 55th year of tours. The current concert tour is hailed as one of the freshest and most appealing attractions. “The people who remember us from our radio-TV days of the 30’s and 40’s will always be with us,” commented the 70-year-old musician. “I’m grateful for that, University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. but to look out on a sea of faces belonging to the teens and young adults means that we’ve hit a vital nerve with the kids of to day.” Most often, Waring added, they’ve come to see “how we treat ‘their music’.” “Most go away surprised and become our greatest disciples,” he noted. The Fred Waring Show com pany’s ability to keep young and adapt to changing musical trends of any given era lies behind this cross-generation appeal. Famed Pennsylvanian concert presentations feature music from popular standards and contempo rary songs to Broadway show tunes, chorales and folksongs, vignettes and the latest novelty tunes. “We never back away from singing a current ‘pop’ tune. Actually, so much of today’s music is honest and basically sound,” Waring said. “We take that type of material and shape it to our style. The result is usually pleasing to the young. But more than that, we make their top tunes not only recognizable but acceptable to their parents and grandparents.” Waring’s versatility can be traced to his boyhood, when the Boy Scout Fife and Drum Corps of Tyrone, Pa., was to parade but the drum major—Waring—didn’t have a baton. He solved the prob lem with showmanship flair, bor rowing a brass-knobbed rod on which his mother’s lace curtains hung. Unforgettable Fred Waring- Pennsylvanians concerts—includ ing several in recent years at A&M—show the verve and versa tility are still there. Leftwich said it is still in doubt whether Waring’s physician will okay the recuperating director’s joining the tour for the Rotary show. If not, the host and director will be Richard Arlen, motion pic ture actor and regular on the Broadway stage, television and radio. The concert, however, is a War ing designed and rehearsed pro duction. Junior accounting major Mickey Wiesinger was appointed public relations director and psychology sophomore James Collins was ap pointed finance chairman. Math freshman Shirley Kotara is the new Council and Directorate sec retary. MSC directorate structure was changed a bit for next year “to Meeting for the first time Monday night, the International Student Association’s General As sembly ratified a proposed con stitution, but postponed election of officers until Monday at 7:30. The delegates ratified the con stitution with a few amendments, among them being: the executive vice chairman would be the Stu dent Senate representative for the group, elections would be held at the end of the spring term and quorum requirements. The Council voted to change the grade requirements for Coun cil officers and committee chair men. Under the new method the president and vice presidents must maintain a g.p.r. of 2.50 overall or 2.75 for the two previ ous semesters. Committee chair men must maintain an overall Fernando Giannetti, one of the group’s founders and acting chair man, presided over the meeting. Before debate began, Giannetti introduced Kent Caperton, presi dent of the Student Senate, and Caperton spoke briefly. Giannetti then thanked those who had helped set up the group. He urged the group to have faith so the Association could work. Adreas Borona, the Mexican delegate, presented the constitu tion to the group. Men and women’s spring fash ions will step front and center here Wednesday. Styles, colors and fabrics will be exhibited at the Memorial Stu dent Center Host and Fashion Committee’s “Fashion Function.” The 8 p.m. show in the MSC Fernando Giannetti Ballroom is open to the public, announced Laura Sorenson, com mittee chairman. Admission will be 75 cents per student and $1 for public patrons. Refreshments will be served. Miss Sorenson said the Coun try Squire and Beverly Braley’s are sponsors and providing ap parel, being brought in from Dal las. Men’s fashions will be mod eled by several Texas A&M stu dents including Kent Caperton, Student Senate president. Mam’- selles of the Host and Fashion Committee will show distaff styles. Rusty Rush of Country Squire said spring men’s fashions to be shown will run the gamut “from swim wear to dressy street clothes. The styles will be more contoured, such as a pinched- waist coat.” New bright colors and fabrics also will be featured in both women’s and men’s fash ions. The Host and Fashion Commit tee, a part of the MSC Council and Directorate, regularly holds fashion events and serves campus social events with hostesses. International Association OKs constitution, postpones election