THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1940 THE BATTALION PAGE 7 Outstanding Swimmers of Aggieland Here is the Texas Aggie water polo team which will shoot for the Senior National A.A.U. water polo title this year. Last year the Aggies won the junior title at St. Louis and now have to step up a class. Since Arthur Adamson came to A. & M. as coach in 1935 the Aggies have lost but one water polo game and that was in the finals for the junior crown in 1938. Only three members of the 1939 cham pions are back this season. Left to right, front row—John (Bubba) Reeves; F. M. Edwards, Barton (Butch) Robertson, Henry Rollins, Raymond Loomis, and Paul Kirk. Back row—Ernest Conway, H. H. Webb, John (Pinkie) Couch, captain. Coach Arthur Adamson, Nicholas (Nickie) Ponthieux, Harold (Junie) Hensley, and Edward (Eddie) Johnson. Couch, W. Hensley and Ponthieux are hold-overs from the championship team of 1939. Reeves was a letterman guard on the Texas Aggie football team of 1939, national champions. (Photo by Howard Berry). “Trends of Engineering Education” Is Article by Technology Professor An article that should be of in terest to all students and teachers of engineering is a report on “Present Status and Trends of En gineering Education,” by Dr. Dugald C. Jackson, professor emeritus of the Massachusetts In stitute of Technology, issued by the committee on engineering- schools of the Engineers’ Council for Professional Development, with the aid of funds supplied by the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of Teaching. In discussing the present status of engineering education, Dr. Jackson states that the majority of about 160 engineering schools in the United States are now of sound status and are alert to im prove their effectiveness. The principal defects, he says, are, first, a lack of unity of learning in science and political economy as applied to the engineering school —that is, the varying degrees of stress put on these fields by the different colleges; second, a fail ure to make the engineering cur ricula fit in with political economy as well as it does with physical science; third, the lack of an adop tion of professional ideals as dis tinguished from those of crafts manship or speculative philosophy; fourth, a failure to impress on all students that the successful engi neer’s life demands continuous study throughout its length; and, finally, the failure to recognize the importance of the proper use of research in all engineering educa tion from the sophomore under graduate level to the most advanc ed levels. Some critics favor the standard ization of all engineering educa tion through state legislation, and support their idea by comparing the profession of engineering with those of medicine and law. Such proposals are erroneous because the scope of engineering activities is entirely different from that of either medicine or law. The variety of undergraduate and grad uate curricula exists to meet the needs of the nation and its indus tries, and is constantly changing to meet the changing needs, or as is made possible by further scien tific research. Out of 135 engineering schools investigated by the Engineers’ Council for Professional Develop ment, there was a total of 3,832 persons employed in the teaching staffs of the engineering depart ments. These schools reported a total capital investment of $137,- 835,000 for building and equip ment apportioned to engineering, and an annual income allotted to engineering of $23,870,000. This foregoing investment was $2,606 per student, and the annual income for engineering was $358 per stu dent per year, including part-time students. Dr. Jackson notes as the first trend in engineering education the desire of engineering teachers to formulate true definitions of the objectives for engineering educa tion. He also notes the widely spreading recognition of the need for improved methods of teaching and the fuller acceptance of the significance of research for the education of engineering students in the upper years of their under graduate careers. In regard to students, Dr. Jack- son comments on the slowly wid ening interest in examinations “of truly comprehensive character” and the “reduced emphasis on term examinations in individual sub jects,” as well as more stimulat ing textbooks. There is, he points out, increasing interest in student meetings of the national engineer ing societies and a tendency to wards the carrying on of experi ments in education and research in which more than one depart ment takes an active interest. Another trend is the recently de veloped attention to the social re lations of engineering and the so cial responsibilities of engineers. The change of attitude towards the study of English “has been almost revolutionary” and there appears to be a return to the study of for eign languages. Dr. Jackson al so points out the necessity for an accurate study of economics and sociology by engineering students. In completing the list of trends, Dr. Jackson observes a “softening” of “institutional jealousies” and predicts that ultimately engineer ing schools will reclassify them selves according to “their ability to minister to students of various ambitions,” thus eliminating the duplication of work and concen trating the different kinds of work. He also observes a tendency of technical institutes to change to degree-granting engineering schools, and says that there should be better-defined engineering schools and a proportional num ber of technical institutes for stu dents desiring to enter the engi neering trades. J. E. Simpson Marries TSCW June Graduate Announcement has been made of the marriage of Dr. J. E. Simpson to Miss Rosemary January, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Malcom Jan uary of Denton, Saturday evening, February 10. The wedding was solemnized in the study of Rev. J. V. Gray, Baptist minister. The bride is a student of T. S. C. W. and will continue her studies there until June, after which the couple will be at home at College Station. Dr. Simpson is a graduate of N.T.S.T.C. and of Texas A. & M., and received his doctorate at Louis iana State University this past year. He is now a state research chemist at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station. National Youth Administration Will Spend $70,200 at A. &M. This Year The College and Graduate Work-f program of the National Youth Administration for 1939-1940, it was announced today by Adminis trator Aubrey Williams, is reach ing 18.8 per cent more youths than during the preceding academic- year. The increase has been made possible by the Relief Appropria tion Act of 1939. Colleges and universities were assigned quotas of students on the basis of 10 per cent of the total number of resident undergraduate and graduate students, 16 to 24 years of age inclusive, enrolled as of October 1, 1938. For the cur rent academic year 1939-1940, the national student quota is 104,379 as compared with a student quota of 87,886 during the year 19,38-1939. Undergraduate college students are allowed to earn an amount, set by the various college authorities, between a minimum of $10.00 per month and a maximum of $20, while the earnings of graduate stu dents range from a minimum of $20 to a maximum of $30.00. In November, 1938, preliminary fig ures show that N.Y.A. paid an average wage of $13.28 to college and graduate students. The aver age wage of the undergraduates was $12.93, while that of the graduate students was $21.31. The total allotment of College and Graduate Work funds for the academic year 1939-1940 amounts to $14,038,268. The allotments to the states are made on a monthly basis usually over a nine-month, but sometimes over an eight-month period. The monthly allotment to all the states, District of Colum bia, Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico is $1,562,007. During 1939-40 the student quota of A. & M. was 520, the monthly allotment was $7,800, and the yearly allotment $70,200. These were second greatest among all the schools in the state, exceeded only by the University of Texas. The National Youth Administra tion College and Graduate Work program provides part-time em ployment to needy students be tween the ages of 16 and 24 inclu sive who are regularly enrolled in non-profit-making, tax-exempt, bona-fide educational institutions The officials of each educational institution select the needy stu dents for this work and assign them to projects under the super vision of the faculty. These col lege students perform a wide variety of work activities, such as research and laboratory work, building and repair of equipment, construction and repair of buildings TELEVISION GOES LONG RANGE; MAY SOON BE COAST TO COAST NEW YORK.—Television, until"fmercial sponsorship of television ;; SEABOARD LIFE INSURANCE CO. HOUSTON, TEXAS ★ ★ ★ The squirrel was provided the instinct to store food for the winter. It is your job to save now so that you too can be independent in the winter of life. Your problems can be solved by members of our College Station Agency Ford Munnerlyn, Dist. Mgr. H. E. Burgess O. B. Donaho Sid Loveless Paul Martin now limited to transmission dis tances of about 50 miles, may soon be on a long-range coast-to-coast basis, it has been announced by Radio Corporation of America. A new relay system in experi mental operation for almost a year makes it possible to televise pro grams on a network linking New York and Boston and Washing ton. Should the F.C.C. grant a pending application to permit com- and other school facilities, clerical and stenographic work and library assistance. programs, the network might be extended by means of further tech nical improvements from coast to coast, it was indicated by the R.C.A. announcement. The new relay system was des cribed by David Sarnoff, R.C.A. president, as “the missing link in television.” In its final develop ment, it may make possible, he said, “network television.” Specially designed relay sta tions, using frequencies many times higher than those used in regular television broadcasting, are employed in the new system. START THE NEW TERM RIGHT! Aggies old and new wiii want to start the new term with the right kind of regulation uniforms. The best is always the cheapest. You’ll find our uniform to be of the very best quality and at prices you’ll want to pay. Every item regulation and guaranteed to give satisfactory wear. Regulation Slacks with High Back 18 ounce, all wool serge Regulation Knox Hats Regulation “Aggie” Coveralls sanforized, bleached herringbone, zipper front Regulation Caps Regulation “Archer” Trench Coats 50 inch length Regulation Shirts (Form Fit) West Point Bombay Shirts Regulation Sam Browne Belts Regulation Metal and Embossed Insignia Hat Cords, Hat Straps, Web Belts and Metal Polish Army Blankets, Griffin’s Shoe Polish, Saddle Soap Laundry Bags, Blitz., etc. WITH EVERY REGULATION SHIRT WE FURNISH R.O.T.C. PATCH AND SEW THEM ON FOR YOU FREE Regulation Interwoven Socks, White Shirts by Arrow and Marlboro, Underwear by B.Y.D. and Arrow. Aggie Belts, Pennants and Stickers. 7 f T TV WIMEiERLEY STONE DANSBY sattCxtiz CLOChlERS II.S. ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION OFF F YEAR’S SURVEY SLED DOGS...YEAR’S SUPPLY OF SLOW-BURNING CAMEL CIGARETTES ACCOMPANY ADMIRAL BYRD TO ANTARCTIC I \ /' v 1 1 ' ' V I : 1 •L, lltw^ ^ ill Second Annual Twin Convention To Meet At Baylor April 5 WACO, Feb. 14.—Letters have gone out to the governors of the 47 states other than Texas asking them to name college twins to rep resent their states at the second annual Texas College Twin con vention on the Baylor University campus April 5 and 6. Lois and Louise Bailey, identicals who are presidents of the host Baylor Twin club, announced that plans are now underway for a program that should excel in many ways the first annual meeting of the group, which attracted inter national attention. Early estimates are that 150 sets of college twins will be in at tendance. Eighty-five sets came last year. On the University of California’s new geological clock, one second represents the passage of 50,000 years. OFF TO VOLUNTARY EXILE: Right now if you had to choose the one and only brand of cigarette you would smoke through a whole year—you’d make sure you picked the right brand. The men on the Antarctic expedition were in a situation like that. The expedition took Camels! Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd explained: "Slow-burning Camels are a great favorite with us.” You, yourself, may never go near the South Pole, but the right cigarene is important to you, too. Camels give you extra mildness, extra coolness, and extra flavor—plus extra smoking in every pack. (See below.) "MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF...MORE PUFFS PER PACK"... That’s how these three members of the U. S. Antarctic expedition tell of the advantages of their favorite cigarette... slow-burning Camels. Richard Moulton, senior dog-driver (center), sums up when he says: "Slow burning is my measure of a milder, cooler, more flavorful smoke. I’d sledge a mile for a Camel.” Nothing destroys a cigarette’s delicate elements of flavor and fragrance like the excess heat of too-fast burning. Cigarettes that burn fast also burn hot. Camels are slower-burning...milder, mellower, and—natu rally—cooler! Try Camels. Find out for yourself how slow-burning Camels give you more pleasure per puff...and more puffs per pack—more actual smoking (see right). CAMELS FOR MILDNESS, COOLNESS, AND FLAVOR -SLOW-BURNING COSTLIER TOBACCOS L^X-.v.v.x<.v:£v£j ^ In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the aver age of the 15 other of the largest- selling brands tested—slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! Copyright. 1940, B. J. Reynolds Tobscco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.