r'atje o> ILocal IMt tSMI lAL.IOi'J TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1981 A&M tops VMI in diversity By CINDY GEE Battalion Staff Civilian students, Texas A&M University’s scholastic program and the freedom to choose were appreciated more after cadets visited the Virginia Military Insti tute. Last week Col. James Woodall, Ken Cross, Kelly Castleberry, Bruce Dunn, Kenneth LePori, David Moyer and Arthur Pregler flew with Texas National Guard officials on a military aircraft to Washington D.C. The group then drove to Lexington, Va. and spent two days exchanging ideas on Cadet Corps operations with peo ple at VMI. “I came back with a tremen dous appreciation for the environ ment we’re in because we’re able to experience things outside of the military,” Cross said. VMI is one out of two military schools that are still all-male. The campus is older and more compact than Texas A&M and has about 1,300 cadets, he said. “Non-regs and females are something we should be grateful for,” Cross said. “It’s a constant threat because we (Texas A&M cadets) could easily quit and be a non-reg. The leaders in the Corps have got to be constantly innova tive to make sure the conditions are the best. “If cadets at A&M don’t like what we’re doing, they can quit so easily. That risk is the best thing we could have. At VMI if you quit the Corps, you quit the school, and you lose about $5,000.” Cross said another reason he appreciates civilian students is be cause they make Texas A&M a much larger school, and larger schools can offer better degree programs. Cross also noted that cadets at Texas A&M have more responsi bilities than those at VMI. At VMI military officers run the school, and at Texas A&M the cadets su pervise themselves, he said. At VMI only a small percentage of the seniors have a position, and it’s possible for a sophomore there to have more authority than a senior, he said. “They really were impressed by our uniform,” he said. “The care, time and preparation of their uniforms takes about one-tenth of the time that ours does. They wear shoes that you can’t shine.” Except for seniors, cadets at VMI can only go out on Saturday night, and must wear their uni forms to town. Cross said the cadets there keep their civilian clothes in a basement under the building, and never wear them on the campus. But Moyer said, “They have a museum specifically for George C. Marshall. I’d like to see A&M have some kind of museum.” “I was surprised at the similar ities between the two Corps of Cadets,” Woodall said. Their ac tions in the mess hall and the way they treat their “rats” (freshmen) were very similar, he said. Woodall said the trip made the cadets appreciate the conditions they have at Texas A&M. VMI cadets share a room with three other men, and they have to roll their mattresses and stack their cots every morning, he said. VMI is filled with Civil War heritage, and cadets there often discuss it. Cross said. The school was burned during the Civil War, then rebuilt afterwards. Most of the buildings at VMI are the same ones that were built at that time. Woodall said VMI had the advantage in parking, though. Only seniors are allowed to have cars. Several of the first presidents and professors at Texas A&M were VMI graduates, he said, so there are a lot of ties between the two universities. Woodall said as long as they are able to fly with Texas National Guard officers every year to Washington, they will try to make the trip. On The Double Northgate 846-3755 XEROX COPIES, TYPING We specialize in Resumes, Theses, Dissertations Open M-F, 7 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat., 9-6 Greg Mier, a bio-engineering freshman, en joys the sun at Harrington Tower Monday afternoon. The weather continues to be unsea- Staff photo by Chuck Chapman sonably warm as the temperature rose to the high 60s. IQE KgnananK Cannon restoration bills, questions, slow project until sk ■)nditw r develop nsicMj he waslft e doctor icedlessj' inform^ jack W ledule, "* rs and By GWEN HAM Battalion Reporter The marines may be looking for a few good men, but the Corps of Cadets is looking for a caisson, six trained horses, a skilled driver and answers to many questions. A 1902 cannon recovered by some cadets a few years ago and believed to be part of Texas A&M University’s history, was to be res tored for the University of Texas march-in and parade in Austin. But not all went as planned. The cannon restoration didn’t meet the University of Texas game deadline, but that was just as well, Tom Wilson, Corps personnel pfiBcer said. There are so many rules about Southern Conference games that instigators of the renovation pro ject realized there was no way they could have used it as planned, even if it had been finished, Wil son said. Those working on the cannon restoration initially hoped it could be used at football games, parades 1 march-ins. A few cadets discovered the cannon in a gully while cutting wood for the bonfire in the early 70s. No one is sure how it got wspaptf phy ilassf* words longer- 1 or style/* theant^ the addr* 8 tie, as Universe ;A&M’ sb “ ;xsm Si ster,^ . Using rx 77843' ively/j, ■dited' 0 there, but John Gunter, a former cadet from the Class of’78, and the Parsons’ Mounted Cavalry began a restoration project. “Back then money was short and not many people held interest in the project,” Wilson said. The project died out. Then, Wilson said, Pete Nor- mand, a former cadet from the class of ’71, wrote a letter to the Corps of Cadets and stirred up in terest in restoring the cannon. At that time it seemed the only thing holding back completion of the project were wheels with a metal hub machined specifically to fit its metal axle. But in October of this year a gunsmith in Oklaho ma City agreed to take on the job, and former students said they would help cover the estimated $3,000 cost. Two thousand dollars had already been sunk into the pro ject. Yet, the cannon restoration still encountered complications. “There was a lot more to the project than we thought,” Wilson said. “We had good response to requests for donations but then we realized that the cannon would re quire a caisson to pull it, a team of six horses specially trained to pull a caisson and someone experi enced in driving a team of horses pulling a caisson. “If we do happen to get a cais son and six horses, then tbere’s the problem of finding someone who knows how to train the horses to pull a caisson, boarding, buying feed and finding someone to care for the horses,” Wilson said. Even though a few cadets claim to know how to drive a team of horses pulling a caisson, “What do we do when they graduate?” Wil son asked rhetorically. “These questions have to be answered be fore we can make anymore defi nite decisions. MSC Political Forum invites you to “DISCOVER THE NATION’S CAPITOL” Over Spring Break (March 14-20) TRIP INCLUDES: Breakfast with the Texas Delegation White House Tour Governmental Briefings Kennedy Center Performance Washington Post Tour And much, much more! COST: Only $475 (Same as last year!) Sign up in Room 216 MSC Deposit due March 3, 1981 For more information call 845-1515 ON THE PILL? 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