Page 2 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY 125 ‘Years — Wednesday, October 3, Tradition Bound by Spirit THE BATTALIO'i f ^ : " . .. ; 1 Abroad at Pointe f du Hoc and back home at A&M, ; James Earl Rudder built a legacy of courage $ and vision Rudder’s # BATTLES STORY BY ROI.ANDO GARCIA PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE AGG1ELAND Far left: James Earl Rudder played a pivo!: role in the D-Day invasion at Pointe du ! making him one of A&M's most heralded* j heroes. Left: Rudder speaks to Malcolm HaM dent body president, in 1962. Back at Tea A&M, Rudder stood strong by his vision I admit women to the University and to mafc the Corps non-compulsory. When James Earl Rudder took the •helm of the Agricultural and TVIechanical College of Texas in 1959, it was an all-male military school with an enrollment of 7,000 students, most of Whom were in the Corps of Cadets. When Rudder died 10 years later, the small, agrarian school had become Texas A&M University, a coed institu tion of more than 15,000 students — Only a fifth of whom were cadets — well on its way to becoming a world- dlass university offering an array of aca demic and research programs. The transformation A&M under went during the 1960s was not an accident but the result of Rudder’s Vision of a great university anchored in its traditions and his courage to Tmplement unpopular reforms, said Uohn Adams Jr., Class of 1973. Adams •has written three books on A&M’s Ihistory, including Keepers of the 'Spirit which documents the 125-year •history of the Corps of Cadets. * “He played the leading role, and he -was the only person who could do ’this,” Adams said. “He was an Aggie and a war hero, and he understood that A&M had to change.” When Rudder arrived in College Station in 1958 to become A&M’s vice president, he had little experi ence in higher education but an impressive background. Rudder played center on the A&M football team and graduated in 1932. Rudder, an officer in the Army Reserve, was called to active duty in 1941 and organized the Second Ranger Battalion in 1943 and com manded a pre-invasion D-Day mis sion at Omaha Beach to silence the German guns at the top of the hun dred-foot cliffs at Normandy’s Pointe du Hoc. One of the most her alded war heroes in A&M’s history. Rudder received the Distinguished Service Cross, Legion of Merit, Silver Star, two Bronze Stars and the Purple Heart. At the beginning of a turbulent decade that would bring about many far-reaching reforms, A&M was facing sagging enrollment numbers, low retention rates and a conflict of visions. Adams said, between those deter mined to keep A&M a small, all male, agrarian school and those who believed A&M was on the fast-track to irrelevance unless it grew and expanded its scope beyond the Corps. The two most controversial reforms were admitting women and making membership in the Corps voluntary, both of which strongly were opposed by Aggie traditionalists. “He (Rudder) had very vocal opposi tion from alumni, the Board of Directors and A&M Mothers Clubs. All of these groups were extremely conser vative and traditionalist and were resist ant to change,” Adams said. “They told him that he was ruining the school and that ‘old Army had gone to hell.’” Rudder was loudly booed at a meeting of all cadets as he attempted to explain the impact of allowing women into A&M. But despite intense opposition, the Board voted in 1963 to open enrollment to women after Board chairman Sterling C. Evans hastily convened a meeting. HIHHI when he knew key opponents would not be able to attend, Adams said. However, women did not begin to enroll in large numbers or become a part of campus life until 1972, when female dorms opened, Adams said. Opening the school to women and making the Corps non-compulsory were just part of Rudder’s far-reaching reforms that included a building con struction frenzy that would transform the campus, expansion of graduate and research programs and a greater emphasis on academics. “It wasn’t just about letting girls in, that just happened to be the lightning rod,” Adams said. “They (opponents) were afraid that all these changes would destroy the bedrock traditions and culture that made A&M different from other schools.” Rudder’s greatest legacy, Adams said, is being able to initiate ik reforms A&M needed without tossiij aside the traditions and culture tta made A&M unique. “Rudder was a stabilizing fa* and he ensured that we wouldm throw the baby out with the bathwatti and jettison all the things that mak A&M different from every otk school,” Adams said. “As an Aggie.l* understood tradition and he knewttoi students didn’t come to A&Mjustfot a diploma.” Eddie Davis, Class of 1967 andpres idem of the Texas A&M Foundatiot ,said Rudder’s vision and couragesawi A&M from stagnation and irrelevae “The institution was dying.li^ a small, all-male military school,^ the world around it was changing Unless you were a kid withoutnuick money, or you had some family con nections, A&M didn’t have roudi appeal,” Davis said. “Those change have helped make A&M what it is today, and only Rudder, an Aggieand a war hero, could have done it." iWomen, minorities changed face of A&M By Elizabeth Raines THE BATTALION ' A headline from a July 2, 1927 article of The \Bryan-College Station Eagle titled “8 states and 2 ‘nations are represented in the Student Body at »A&M College this Summer” is evidence of how Ifar Texas A&M University has come in diversify ing itself in the last 125 years. • When the University opened its doors in *1876, officially, only white males were •allowed to attend. It took 87 years for Texas lA&M to integrate both by gender and color. Introducing the Texas A&M® Cadet Nutcraker Series by College Station artist 5 f- w Nadine Stuth. The Officer of o' w (/} O' the Day TM is available at the Texacats booth during the Memorial Student Center Hospitality Committee’s Craft Fair (Nov. 29th-30th) and online at Ag glreLa ndG i fts which happened in 1963. John Adams Jr., Class of 1973 and author of three books on Texas A&M’s history, said there was not nearly as much resistance to the integra tion of African-Americans as there was to women. “The biggest [problems] were bringing women to A&M,” Adams said. “There was much more excitement over that. The issue of blacks was much ado about nothing.” Adams said that even the Texas A&M Mother’s Clubs were against women attending A&M. He said everyone kept wanting to know “why do they need to come here when there are other schools that they can go to?” Suanne Pledger in Heidi Ann Knippa’s thesis “Salvation of a University: Admissions of Women to Texas A&M,” recalled that the first year females were present on campus that they were met with hostility from the stu dent population and certain por tions of the faculty. “For the first time, I knew what people [felt] when they [were] considered as having the wrong color or nationality,” Pledger said. Knippa said women at A&M encountered an unwelcome environment in the 1960s. She said that, in the beginning, the University did not provide cam pus housing for women or an adequate amount of women’s restrooms. Women were accepted into A&M on a limited basis in 1963, and full admission of women began in 1971. The Corps of Cadets allowed women to join in 1974. The University began accept ing African-American students in 1963. Three African-American students enrolled in A&M sum mer school programs as “special students” in the summer of 1963. In 1964, five African-American freshman became the first to join the Corps of Cadets. In 1967, Charles Dixon Jr. became the first African-American to gradu ate from Texas A&M. Fred < o f""* W a < U < C/0 < X H w d: H McClure became the first African-American to become student body president in 1976, one hun dred years after the University opened. Although male international students were attending Texas A&M before either women or African-Americans could attend, their enrollment steadily has increased since Texas A&M began. According to university archives, 43 international students attended A&M in 1954, 546 in 1965, 968 in 1974 and 1,988 in 1996. Adams said when he attended A&M, nobody paid much attention to the diversification of the University. “We never thought of it as diversity,” Adams said. “Things moved on. Life was fine.” Texas A&M University President Dr. Ray M. Bowen said the University is inadequate when it comes to minority enrollment. Dr. Frank Ashley, Director of Texas A&M Admissions, said the current minority enrollment is not up to A&M standards. “I think that a lot of people still have percep tions that everyone here is in the Corps of Cadets and that there are hardly any minorities here at all,” Ashley said. “One thing we are trying to do is change that perception.” Ashley said he tells potential minority students and families to come to Texas A&M and see if it is the place for them “Being a minority myself, I will tell kids that A&M is not for everyone but to come and see for yourself if it is the place for you,” Ashley said.” If we can get the kids on campus, we will capture them, and they’ll come to A&M.” Both Bowen and Ashley cited the Hopwood v. University of Texas decision of 1996, that struck down affirmative action at the uni versity level as one of the reasons for the still low minority numbers. “I think that Hopwood created a big obstacle for us at Texas A&M,” Ashley said. “Hopwood limited a lot of the financial resources that were available for minority students.” Ashley said that although A&M’s minority enrollment took a “nose dive” after the Hopwood decision, the minority enrollment bers are slowly going back up. “We are in a recovery period now,”Ashleysaii “We were doing good in the early 1990s; my in admissions is to surpass what we did." Ashley added that although the top ten percent rule is in place to help increase minority enroll ment, it is not dealing with the financial problems that they are running into. Ashley said the problem does not lie in students being admitted to Texas A&M but in getting them to attend. “The top ten percent rule gets kids accepted but because the financial aspect is missing, dents are choosing to attend other universities out of the state,” Ashley said. “My dream as directot of admissions is that the student population hereal Texas A&M would reflect that of the state of Texas population,” Ashley said. fednesday, Oct BATTALION Traditi institu By Tt When David aMby a visito wta'Gig ’Em” i ibmi'ti but was r ’Em is one of m dear but cannot Traditions Counc science n ‘‘1 think that C that people don’t such an everyday Gig ’Em was c practice before University footb; frogs — poking t tnon expression a asked what the A homed frogs, he : Giving a thur became the first N Ti i I n 4:30 6 PM 12 t 1 Al Sponsored I Memorial Stui