Page 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1978 0 Fish class officers, senators Freshmen vote Thursda By DILLARD STONE Battalion Reporter Freshmen will elect their four class officers and seven student senators in Thursday’s fell election. Both groups of officials will be elected by an at-large vote of the freshman class. Senators will be responsible for attending biweekly senate meet ings, as well as working on one of the five standing student commit tees. The president, vice president, secretary and treasurer will lead the class of ’82 council during the com ing year. “The main requirement of a senator is that he he available to his constituency,” said Bobby Tucker, student body president. The senators who have the time to work hard in student government are the ones who will be re-elected. Tucker said. Senators must maintain a 2.0 overall grade point ratio while in of fice, he added. Eight polling places will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. To vote, stu dents must bring their activity cards to any one of the following places: the bus stops outside the Memorial Student Center, Reed Building, and the Common Corps Guardroom in Lounge| side the Commons; the sidewalk outside Sbisa Dining or the Kleberg Center on the' Campus. A "meet the candidates” gj ing will be held this evenings Duncan Dining Hall, accorij Bob Kamensky, corps comma All freshmen candidates have invited to address the gathj which will begin at appn 7:15, Kamensky said. Army GIs 6 can’t read’ These signs, on the corner of Spence and Lubbock streets, serve as a reminder of the freshman elections Thursday. Seven senators and four class officers are due to be elected. The eight polling places around campus will be open from S a.m. to 6 p.m. Battalion photo by Paige Beasley MSC Cafeteria At Last Year’s Price, You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. 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United Press International FORT HOOD, Texas — Some of the men who would have to lead American soldiers into combat in another war say the inability of many recruits to read and write adequately is reducing the sophisti cation of the modem army and tying up skilled manpower during train ing. These men, combat arms officers and sergeants interviewed at the Army’s largest post, place the blame op the public school system. They pointed to reports in recent years THE BATT GOOFED! The ARQNilVT will not start its wash, dry and fold service for another couple of weeks. The Battalion extends its apologies to the management of the /VHQNflVT and to our readers. which have accused the system of failing to teach these basics plus basic mathematics properly. In the increasingly technical mili tary profession this means, they say, that the armed services must spend time and resources bringing many recruits up to trainable standards before they can begin to learn com bat skills. “Recruits are a product of society and many high schools are not adequately training graduates for high-order thinking,” said 1st Sgt. Franklin Lee, senior sergeant in a company of rifleman. “Imagine yourself in the place of a mid-level or junior non-comissioned officer. Imagine teaching the trooper who recognizes the word in the manual but who may not know what it means. You can go really low on the verbal scale to get across to him, but meanwhile the brighter trooper is going to go to sleep on you,” Lee said. The consensus among more than a dozen officers and NCOs inter viewed is that military operations require more complicated equip ment than ever before. Even the in fantryman, who traditionally fought only with small arms, now must cope with a variety of complex and delicate missiles, radios ana chemi cal weapons. In the armory, with its laser range finders, and the artil lery, with computerized fire direc tion, the problem has become even more acute. “You can teach one of these people to put stage one here and stage two on top of that and so on,” Lee explained. “But you can’t teach him what the component does.” Since the draft was abolished, the Army has encouraged recn draw manpower from amoiijj highest scorers on the Armyq ing examinations, according study by Rep. Les Aspin, D-i.| member of the House Armedi ices Committee. The Aspin study suggeststl Army is taking fewer men I lowest intellectual category t could, and that with apn with high school diplonusj Army is passing over manyp tially valuable recruits. “High school dropouts ana difficult to deal with,” said WtJ Nelson, the Aspin aide wboj piled the study. “Of highs dropouts, about 40 percent! work out. That means thatifyi fuse to accept) 100 dropouts y losing 60 good soldiers.” The^ bat leaders at Fort Hood ag graduation from high school^ not guarantee the recruit hash tellectual equipment to deal^ military demands. “The (1st Cavalry Division! been testing all new people, | Capt. Richard Ringler, comm of an artillery battery. ‘Oflil cruits tested, they found levels of between 9th andl grade. All those tested word school graduates.” The needt| grade education to a minimi ceptable level for some means less resources are ava for advancing the education 8 ter qualified soldiers, Ringlersl ATTENTION: STUDENTS MSC Great Issues Presents MSC Free U Mr. Brady Tyson, is Proud to Announce the Birth of .. Foreign Affairs Officer at the U.S. Mission to the U.N. speaking on “The United Nations and Human Rights” MSC Ballroom 12:00 p.m. - Wednesday, Wednesday, October 25th Admission Free MSC TOWN HALL SERIES ATTRACTION 3 HAS BEEN POSTPONED DUE TOBOOK- ING PROBLEMS. A NEW DATE FOR THIS SHOW WILL BE ANNOUNCED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. SEASON TICKET HOLDERS PLEASE RETAIN YOUR TICKETS FOR THIS SHOW. THEY WILL BE HONORED AT THE RESCHEDULED SHOW. TOWN HALL AP PRECIATES YOUR CONTINUED SUP PORT. “If a man wants to go tos chances are he’s the one you! most with the unit,” Ringlerj “You can’t send him off tos cause you’d be cutting yourj throat when you go to the fielcl Educational deficiencies in'! more than training proble®J some cases, failures in trainiufl rise to difficulties in discipline If trary to the commonly hekb that the less intelligent soldisl spends more readily to orders| combat leaders stressed thatl( educated soldiers make leadf “The more education thej vidual has, the easier he is I said Chief Warrant Officer|! Higgins, a helicopter pilots cavalry regiment. "As the i goes up in education, he asksfc questions because he knows tk| son for the order. He can f out for himself.” SHORTCOURSES MW 7:30 $1. ★ floral design w 7:30 $16. REGISTRATION October 26, 1978 8 a.m. * 5 p.m. MSC Breezeway For more information on our new offspring, call: 845-1515 Sgt. 1st Class Ralph Lud»S| platoon sergeant in a tank comj said discipline problems have# somewhat since the advent 1 all-volunteer force. “19711 when we bottomed out,’ M “Now we’ve tightened up. No*| have better control of your" There seems to be a better trooper. ” Lee suggested the problem^ be solved through broader-f education both in the military^ civilian schools. “If you can j individual interested in thinj?| liberal arts, history, psycholofj finds other outlets,” Lee said j reduce your discipline problems. If you keep upj? both the civilian and military ^ you get a better soldier-citiK 1 1 course day/time ★ relaxation M 8 ★ defensive driving Nov. 10-11 ★ power puff mechanics M 6:30 $1- If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . 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