Thursday, Movember 29,1984/The Battalion/Page 5 First woman at A&M recalls campus life By KIRSTEN DIETZ Reporter When Texas A&M formally Ipened its door to women degree candidates in 1963, the first woman to walk through was a 56-year-old grandmother of four. Stella Haupt, one of 150 women I to be admitted to the University that ■ear, had earned her undergraduate Hegrees in English and education 1 ®j;rom Hardin Simmons University in jAbilene in 1930 — 33 years before making history at A&M. She earned a master’s degree in education from ||A&M in 1964, the summer after she lll'as admitted. At the time she had | taught sixth grade in the Bryan In dependent School District for 10 ■ears. ■ Haunt said there were several rea- ;Sons why she was chosen to be the ■first woman allowed to enroll for study toward a degree. “I was a mature woman already teaching, I wouldn’t be going full time and I was the wife of a profes sor and former student,” she said. “We received no ugly harassment at all as someone else might have. “There were lots of former stu dents and students that objected (to the admittance of women), so the school just couldn’t afford to admit a young girl just out of high school.” Haupt said she never encoun tered harassment probably because few men in the College of Education were taking the same classes she was and because she took most of her classes at night. When her admission to Texas A&M was announced, the media de scended upon her at work. But she said she was prepared. “My husband forewarned me they were coming, so I w'as able to fore warn the children,” she said. But Haupt prefers to emphasize the fact that she, her oldest daughter and a granddaughter are the first three generations of women to grad uate from Texas A&M. Her daugh ter received a master’s degree in the late ’60s and and her granddaughter received an undergraduate degree in 1978. “It made about as big a splash in some ways as when I was admitted,” she said of media reaction to the milestone. Maroon blood has continued to run through the family. Three other granddaughters received Texas A&M diplomas, three grandchildren are currently juniors and two grand children in high school plan to at tend the University. Haupt holds another place of Chevron-Gulf merger phases out workers, offers severance pay Stella Haupt honor as the longest sustaining member of the Campus Study Group, belonging since 1931. The organization was formed in 1916 as a study club for women connected to the University. But Haupt said she is more active in the Daughters of the American Revolution, Daughters of the Ameri can Colonies and United Daughters of the Confederacy because of an in terest in genealogy. • Weinberger: If we must fight we must win 3d Official promises no Vietnam e to remw terial usedn al cavity, J develop ik 'be said. . were doirt crooked sa- Jition wil# to detemirit who did in United Press International WASHING EON — Defense Sec- ‘etary Caspar Weinberger promised Wednesday that U.S. troops will not be slowly drawn into Vietnam-style xrnibat in Central America, and ben listed six tests for going to war, including a “clear intention” to win. The Pentagon chief said Ameri- :an troops should be committed only ts a “last resort” and when their ac- ion is vital to U.S. national interests. But, Weinberger said, “Let no one entertain any illusions — if our vital interests are involved, we are pre- the problem p are d to fight. And we are resolved hat if we must fight, we must win.” He also endorsed Grenada-style ictions, with appropriately sized mom coupk and pleased' aid nospili The paras lames not If down to tie sited withlk | he said. “Al ild them, ski tiled alltbei ike sure tke "very good,' led into siif ss than a dn area of tlier e them a nfection.saii Siamese w nly after tkei /ered by Cat' 33-year-olil >out 9 a.ti prepared fa use an ultra- ed the tw ed ase el trailer. ; m told him it but put over asiness in lb v friend, DC me never abk mentioned k) i evidence (i at the Patier sidentialatei on revealed ad neverre ir coat from i ■ft it for alter American forces seeking “clearly de fined” objectives. A prominent theme in Weinberg er’s speech was the desire to avoid another Vietnam — a costly conflict undermined by a lack of public sup- port. “The president will not allow our military forces to creep — or be drawn gradually — into a combat role in Central America or any other place in the world,” Weinberger said. “In those cases where our national interests require us to commit com bat forces, we must never let there be doubt of our resolution,” he said. “When we commit our troops to combat we must do so with the sole object of winning.” Weinberger listed six major tests for going to war, saying they “can be helpful in deciding whether or not we should commit our troops” in the future: • Forces should not be com mitted unless it is “deemed vital to our national interest or that of our allies.” • There must be a “clear inten tion of winning” and there should be no hesitation to commit limited forces “sized accordingly,” such as in the U.S.-led invasion of the Carib bean island of Grenada Oct. 25, 1983. • Political and military objectives should be “clearly defined.” • The relationship between the size of the force and the objectives “must be continually reassessed and adjusted if necessary.” • “Before the U.S. commits com bat forces abroad, there must be some reasonable assurance” of sup port from the people and Congress. “We cannot fight a battle with the Congress at home while asking our troops to win a war overseas or, as in the case of Vietnam ask our troops not to win, but just to be there.” • “Finally, the commitment of U.S. forces to combat should be a last resort.” United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — Chevron Corp. said Wednesday 12,000 em ployees nationwide of Chevron and Gulf Corp. are being offered volun tary severance pay as part of the Chevron-Gulf merger. The offer was part of Chevron’s overall plan for merging the two companies’ functions and was an nounced to employees Wednesday. The plan involves the transfer of at least 5,800 workers and the shut down of Gulf facilities headquarters in Pittsburgh. How many jobs will be eliminated, Chevron said, cannot yet be calcu lated, but it is generally understood in the industry that between 5,700 and 7,500 out of the two companies’ total domestic employment of 57,000 will be phased out. Similar reductions will be made among 21,000 workers overseas. The Pittsburgh closure would re sult in the transfer of 1,500 jobs to the San Francisco Bay area. About 2,800 jobs would be transferred out of Houston, mostly to the San Fran cisco area. Another 1,500 jobs at other locations also would be trans ferred to various sites. Chevron said disposition of Gulfs headquarters building in Pittsburgh was “under review.” Research activ ities at Harmer, Pa., where 900 are employed near Pittsburgh, would be mainly merged with Chevron re search in the San Francisco area. Marketing and management functions of Gulf Oil Products, Gulf Pipe Line, Gulf Mineral Resources, and the International Division of Gulf Oil Exploration and Produc tion all would be consolidated in the San Francisco area. Gulfs credit card operation in Atlanta, which em ploys 500, also would move to San Francisco. However, 3,000 jobs were ex pected to remain on Houston after the merger is completed, as well as 7,000jobs elsewhere in Texas. Employee relocations were not ex pected to begin until next spring. Chevron said employees not offered transfers would be given “severance benefits and out-placement assis tance at company expense.” The 12,000 offered voluntary sev erance should receive up to a year’s pay and previously earned retire ment benefits. Transferred em ployes would be granted Chevron’s regular moving benefits. Program aids war vets Cooke: Structure often confused with quality By ROBIN BLACK Senior Staff Writer “In the year 2004 I would like to see every college graduate be able to write simple English,” Alistair Cooke, featured speaker of the E. L. Miller Lecture Series, said Wednes day. Cooke made his second of three appearances for the lecture series. Wednesday’s address, sponsored by the Great Issues Committee, was advertised beforehand as being about the state of America 20 years from now. Cooke, however, had other plans. “I’m not here to give a lecture,” he said. “A lecture is a reading. What I’d like to do instead is hold a sympo sium — a bringing together of voi ces.” One question asked of Cooke con cerned the recent topic — especially locally — of world universities. Cooke said he thinks universities striving for this classification tend to go about it the wrong way. “Universities have a tendency to confuse the structure with the qual ity,” Cooke said, referring to the amount of money put into buildings, laboratories and other facilities. “First rate people don’t grow on trees and they don’t grow in steel labs,” he said. Administrators are fond of talk ing about how many Nobel prize winners they’ve recruited, while their average student is a moron, he said. “The test of whether a university is of the world class is the intellectual quality of the average student,” he said. And the key to intproving the in tellect of the average student, he said, lies in recruiting the right tea chers. Cooke will give his last address to day at 4 p.m. in 204C in the Sterling C. Evans Library. By DALLAS MORRIS Reporter Post-traumatic stress syndrome, a disorder associated with war veter ans, is more common than was once believed, says Dr. Merrill Lipton, a psychiatrist with the Texas A&M College of Medicine. Lipton is a staff physician in the Teague Veterans Center and has co founded a 3-year-old therapy pro gram for veterans and ex-POWs. Dr. William Schaffer, a Teague Center social worker, and Lipton both said they feel their therapy program has been successful. “We feel that post-traumatic stress disorder is more common than we earlier believed but that the diagno sis is frequently missed,” Lipton said. “And, once diagnosed, obtaining a medical history and symptoms can be more difficult than average be cause of the veterans’ reluctance to dwell on the incidents.” Lipton said most older veterans are reluctant to admit to symptoms related to their war experience and often deny a symptom when asked a direct question. Traumatic stress reactions in life may be brought on by pressures un related to war, Lipton said. Any stressful experience, such as the in ability to work due to a heart attack, the loss of a loved one, or being the victim of a rape or natural disaster, can cause a reaction. The treatment for post-traumatic stress syndrome is different for ev eryone, Lipton said. Some people have the best results when working a in a group. An effective part of the treatment for group members has been dis cussions of recurring bad wartime memories with others who have been in the same situation, Lipton said. Sometimes medication is given to a person to help calm his nerves, he said. 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