■ - ■ ' ■ ■ v ■ I ■ I " .. 1 ' , I' I 'I 1 ,(I ■ • • : ■ " \HALION be Battalion Hot summer days Vol. 66 No. 127 College Station, Texas Wednesday, June 9, 1971 Thursday and Friday — Partly cloudy to cloudy, afternoon rain or thundershowers. Southerly winds 10-15 mph. High 89°, low 71°. Weekend — Partly cloudy. Southerly winds 10-15 mph. High 90°, low 70°. 845-2226 Calhoun will become v.p. for academics li * I IF LT. GOV. BEN BARNES receives a greeting at Easterwood Airport last Wednesday from A&M President Dr. Jack K. Williams and representatives of the Texas 4--H Club. Barnes was here to speak to the 4-H group during its annual Roundup. \Local education center established through grant A $76,782 Mott Foundation grant has been made to Texas A&M for establishment of a com munity education center here, A&M President Dr. Jack K. Wil liams has announced. The foundation selected Texas A&M as the location for the com munity education center in the Southwest. It will serve Texas, [Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisi- a. The center will be one of 12 throughout the nation and one of Ihree created this year by the Mott Foundation. Mott community education cen- Iters develop through faculty and ;rea school district involvement irograms for maximizing educa- Itional resources for all members of a community. Philanthropist Charles S. Mott [envisioned the operation and set ip the foundation to support such programs. Education Dean Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert said the A&M center will be attached to the Depart ment of Educational Administra tion headed by Dr. Harold L. Hawkins. The center will begin operation July 1 with Dr. Robert I. Ber- ridge as director. Staffing ini tially will also include a secre tary. Hubert said the grant provides assistance in establishing the center and its first year operation. Year-to-year renewals on a cost sharing basis are expected to match university and area school district input. Total annual budget would be about $220,000 in line with the original proposal, Hubert said. The education dean said the center “will be an extremely fine program for the university.” Berridge has been assistant di rector of a Mott center at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind., since 1968. It is the Midwest cen ter for dissemination, consulta tion, research and training in community education improve ment. He has degrees from Seton Hall, Texas A&I and Michigan State Universities, with the doc tor of education awarded at East Lansing in 1969. Berridge also has done advanced work at the University of Texas at Austin and Teachers College, Columbia University. Berridge taught and was prin cipal and federal programs direc tor of Corpus Christi schools. Be fore going to East Lansing for doctoral studies under Mott in ternship, he was interim director of the Community Action Pro gram for Nueces County. AUSTIN—Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr. was named academic vice pres ident of Texas A&M University at a meeting here Friday of the Texas A&M University System Board of Directors. Calhoun, 54, currently serves as Texas A&M’s vice president for programs, dean of geosciences and director of the institution’s Center for Marine Resources. The ap pointment is effective Sept. 1. He succeeds Dr. Horace R. Byers who is retiring from his administrative position but will remain at Texas A&M in his ca pacity as distinguished professor of meteorology. The board officially lauded Dr. Alvin I. Thomas, president of Prairie View A&M College, for action following the campus dis orders last spring. “The board commends Dr. Thomas and the students, faculty and staff who supported him in re-establishing an atmosphere conducive to learning and academ ic achievement and in carrying out the policies of the Board of Directors at the Prairie View A&M College campus,” read the motion introduced by board mem ber Ford D. Albritton Jr. of Bryan. Prior to their regular business meeting, the Texas A&M directors held a joint session with regents of the University of Texas System to sell bonds. Texas A&M’s por tion of the sale totaled $5 million, with the bonds being purchased by Drexel Firestone, Inc., Blyth & Co., Inc. & Associates of New York at an effective interest rate of 4.8705 percent. The Texas A&M board also awarded three construction con tracts totaling $559,649 and ap propriated $87,500 for a fourth project. John Gray Co., Inc., of Galves ton won a $198,562 contract to build an oceanographic staging facility at Texas A&M’s new Mitchell Campus on Galveston’s Pelican Island. It will serve as a support facility for the universi- Silver Taps policy changed E Silver Taps will be held only once a month during the school year according to a new policy announced by A&M President Jack K. Williams and the Uni versity’s Executive Committee. | “Significant growth in the number of A&M faculty, staff and student deaths has made a policy change concerning individ ual Silver Taps ceremonies nec essary,” explained Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigan. F “Silver Taps traditionally was MSC will hold street dance Friday at 9 Navasota, a band from Hous ton, will provide the music for the first MSC Summer Director ate activity this summer. The Street Dance will be Fri day, from 9 p.m. until 12 mid- nite in front of Sbisa (south side), Joe Aridondo of the MSC said Tuesday. He said the purpose of the dance is to get people who are living on and off campus to get to know each other. ( “Everyone is urged to come and listen to the Bayou sound of Navasota whether or not he or she has a date,” Aridondo said. The summer Directorate will meet Thursday, at which time plans for the rest of the sum mer will be made. Aridondo said the Directorate is looking for peo ple interested in working with the Directorate. He urged stu dents interested to go by the Stu dent Program Office in the MSC and leave their name and address. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. held as soon as possible after each student’s death. The policy change will hold the number of ceremonies to once a month,” Hannigan said. “This will empha size the importance of the cere mony and be less demanding on the Ross Volunteers and other people involved in each cere mony.” Under the new policy, the next Silver Taps ceremony will be held on the last Tuesday of Sep tember, if one is necessary. “Also, a new policy concerning the procedure of flying campus flags at half-mast will go into effect along with the new Silver Taps policy,” Hannigan said. “It has reached the point where it seems the flag is at half-mast several times a week.” The policy change will affect the nine flags flown in front of the System Administration Build ing. The center flag in front of the building will be flown at half- mast only on Memorial Day or by proclamation of the President of the United States. On any occasion when the center flag is flown at half-mast, the other flags in the vicinity will not be flown. The three other flags on the campus will be flown at half-mast on any occasion when the flag in front of the System Building is flown at half-mast. They also will be flown at half-mast on the last Tuesday of each month, with the excep tion of December, in memory of deceased members of the staff, faculty and student body. In the event the last Tuesday of a cer tain month is not a suitable date, the dean of students will desig- jniate another date during the month. NASA grant to help battle ship channel, Gulf pollution Airborne detection of pollution along the Houston Ship Channel and Gulf Coast estuaries is among projects funded by a $100,000 grant from the National Aero nautics and Space Administration to Texas A&M’s Remote Sensing Center. Dr. John W. Rouse Jr., RSC director and principal investigator for the grant, said four research programs are funded by the re stricted grant. Two which will be fundamental to interpretation of space satellite data are the water quality study and microwave applications to de tect oil slicks, soil moisture con tent and sea surface conditions. The other two are studies into rangeland conditions and plant viruses, especially the San Augus tine Decline along the Texas coast. NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston will monitor the research, Rouse said. NASA also will fly the missions with special remote sensing-equipped aircraft. The water quality study is in cooperation with the Environmen tal Engineering Division of the Civil Engineering Department here. Dr. Roy W. Hann Jr. heads the division, and his staff has op erated pollution research vessels in the Houston-Galveston area since 1966. “This project will join the air borne sensor capabilities of the Remote Sensing Center with the ground-truth data from the estu arine studies project,” Rouse ex plained. Hann’s group has three of the nation’s best-equipped water qual ity vessels operating on the Gulf Coast and Rouse will use visible and infrared sensors — photo graphic and thermal sensors—for the airborne data. The microwave study will in clude both radar and passive mi crowave sensors in oil slick, sea surface and soil moisture studies. Rouse is a nationally-known mi crowave expert and A&M’s RSC is recognized as one of the best. The center, a consortium of the Colleges of Agriculture, Engineer ing, Geosciences and Science, was started four years ago. “This large grant is evidence our facilities have reached the stage where they are recognized with confidence,” Dr. Rouse said. Vet College obtains new facultymember Dr. Walter Crenshaw, a veter inarian with a private practive in Weslaco the past 22 years, joined the College of Veterinary Medi cine June 1, announced Dean A. A. Price. Crenshaw will be employed as assistant professor of veterinary medicine and surgery in the Small Animal Clinic. He received his DVM degree from Texas A&M in 1946. ty’s three oceanographic research vessels. The structure will include an electronics laboratory, storage space and offices for the port captain and engineer associated with operation of Texas A&M’s three oceanographic research ves sels. University officials said con struction should start about July 1 and be completed shortly after the first of the year. The new facility will be similar in design to the two buildings now John C. Calhoun nearing completion on the Pelican Island site. In other action/concerning Tex as A&M activities in Galveston, the board authorized a 12 per cent increase in room and board fees at the Texas Maritime Acad emy because of rising food and labor costs. Under the new rates effective Sept. 1, the room and board fee for TMA cadets will be $292 per semester or summer cruise. The board awarded a $301,402 contract to Sentry Construction Co. of Bryan to renovate portions of the basement of Texas A&M Sbisa Dining Hall. Another Bryan firm, W. E. Kutzschbach Co., was awarded a $59,685 contract for electrical services for the university’s new educational television facilities under construction. The $87,500 appropriation pro vides funds for detailed design of a new health center at Texas A&M. Calhoun was appointed aca demic vice president upon the rec ommendation of Dr. Jack K. Wil liams, the university’s president. Calhoun joined Texas A&M in 1955 as dean of engineering and director of the Texas Engineer ing Experiment Station and Texas Engineering Extension Service. He was named vice president for engineering in 1957, vice chan cellor for engineering in 1959 and vice chancellor for development a year later. In 1963, he was named science advisor to the Secretary of Inte rior. He returned to Texas A&M in 1965 as vice president for pro grams and distinguished profes sor of petroleum engineering. He was appointed director of the university’s Sea Grant Pro gram in 1968, with the expanded operation being renamed the Of fice of Marine Resources earlier this year. He assumed the post of geosciences dean in 1969. Calhoun, who holds three de grees in petroleum engineering from Penn State, has held key positions in numerous govern mental and professional organiza tions. He is currently chairman of the Ocean Science Affairs Board of the National Academy of Sciences and vice president of the American Society for Engi neering Education. Byers, a member of the Na tional Academy of Sciences, has served as the university’s aca demic vice president since 1968. He joined the institution in 1965 as its first dean of geosciences. Proper accountability needed, educator tells conference If public education is to per form the'task of teaching children to listen, speak, think, read and write, proper accountability must be fixed, a leading educator said here Monday. “Of the states, Texas and Alas ka have the spirit to do the job, and do it well,” declared Dr. Jo M. Stanchfield, keynote speaker of the annual School Adminis trators and Supervisors Confer ence. Fixing accountability requires determining what education is ac countable for, who is accountable and how to accomplish account ability, capsuled Dr. Stanchfield, Occidental College professor and recognized leader in reading, edu cational psychology and adult education. “Accountability means being answerable, liable, chargable and responsible,” she reminded 700 participants at the annual Texas A&M conference. “Education is historically accountable for free, public-supported schools that lead young people to a better life, the ability to participate in our demo cratic society and equity.” The system is responsible for teaching five literary skills, lis tening, speaking, thinking, read ing and writing. “Who is accountable for this? Not just teachers and adminis trators, who are most frequently cited,” Dr. Stanchfield declared. “We’re all in this together. Legis latures and school boards, the public in general, parents and teacher education institutions ought to be there on the firing line with professional educators.” Teachers are on the front of the firing line, but are not in the power structure to instigate new programs and secure funds to back them. The administrator is one of the most important people in education accountability, Dr. Stanchfield told the gathering of county and district superintend ents and instructional supervisors. “The administrator has got to know if his school is being com pletely accountable for the liter acy of its pupils,” she said. “He has to go through classrooms and see whether the right things are happening. He has to get in there on the firing line with the teacher. “If he’s not, we might as well get businessmen to run our schools,” Stanchfield warned. “The American Association of Manufacturers says they have the most trouble with people who don’t know how to listen. We have a bias for the spoken word, the raiment of thought. There are many creative ideas to which no body listens, because the creator can’t put the idea in words,” Dr. Stanchfield added. Thinking is a natural part of reading, if reading is done silent ly with the goal of asking a ques tion and answering it through seeking inferences, predictions or cause-effect relationships, she said. “This oreal, round-robin, barber shop reading circle has to go,” she continued, citing research that indicates people who learn in reading circles continue to read orally. “Reading is thinking with sym bols, taking in thought units with the eyes. There is no automatic thought transfer if a reader has to vocalize each word, sending it through the teeth, lips and throat to the brain,” Dr. Stanchfield add ed. Worst, the reading circle oral subjects the poor reader to ridi cule of his peers, when it is known that the concept of self is most important to the individual, she contended. PROMOTION was in order a few weeks ago for Dr. Lannis Hope, associate College of Education dean, who moved from Lieutenant Colonel to Colonel in the Army Reserve. Taking- part in the ceremonies at Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio are Hope's wife and Brig. Gen. Joe G. Hanover of Bryan, commander of the 420th Engineer Brigade. In civilian life, he’s the district highway engineer for the state highway department. (Photo by Tom Curl)