Paf?e 4 College Station, Texas Friday, September 22, 1961 THE BATTALI^^N Mothers’ Executive Board Meets Members of the executive board of the Fed eration of A&M Mothers’ Clubs met here last weekend. The members are, left to right, Mrs. Carroll W. Cox of Beaumont, first vice president; Mrs. M. T. Harrington, first honorary president; Mrs. Joe A. Smith of Pasadena, president; Mrs. Earl Rudder of College Station, second honorary president; Mrs. H. Elbert Dew of Tyler, second vice president; (second row) Mrs. Grace W. Gil liam of Austin, fifth vice president; Mrs. H. D. Florence of Kingsville, fourth vice president; Mrs. J. D. Petty of Groves, third vice president; Mrs. J. G. Frank of Houston, recording secretary; Mrs. Victor Weber of Victoria, historian; Mrs. Fred L. Cole of Corpus Christi, vice president at large; Mrs. W. M. Dantzler Sr. of Dallas, parliamentar ian ; Mrs. Emogene Bunkley of Pasadena, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Desicelrio Trevins of Laredo, treasurer. (Photo Cour tesy College Information) Speech (Continued fi'om Page 3) >on, lay on its bellies absorbing ihe puerile inanities of Gunsmoke ind 77 Sunset Strip. 1 But part of the fault lies with Educators, themselves. There was ihe sight-reading mania, the ne glect of phonics. And ovex*worked ieachers resorted to multiple :hoice instead of essay-type exam- nation^ , b^eai^se the ^o.rmer j were, :asier to grade. Multiple choice tests will never ;each a young man or woman to hink in the English language. Yet have sympathy for those teach- ;rs who seized upon them. They lo give a horseback estimate of ,he amount of information the stu- lent has absorbed, making allow- ince, of course, for the shrewd juesser. But teachers complain of the ;ime required to grade even these niserable substitutes for essay examinations. Well, when I was n Navy communications school at Harvard during the last war I vatched a sparsely-educated yeo- nan take 500 multiple choice ex- xms each evening, lay them on an electronic device that operated off i master paper, and the machine xot only graded each paper in stantly but marked the wrong an swers. Where is such a machine in our lublic school systems? It has been iround at least 20 years. It would enable an entire department of a najor high school to give a stand- irdized test and have all papers graded by a student assistant be fore supper time. Why are so many of our educa tors apparently afraid of simple teaching machines? With their ju dicious use, teachers would have the leisure .to give, correct and comment on short essay-type quiz zes without which their students will never be able to express them selves. I have been remarking about secondary education in America. As you can gather, I am not ex actly awed by it. And neither, I suspect, are you. But you have a college. What has all this to do with your problem? I think it has everything to do VETERINARIANS WHITE PANTS Fast Color Sanforized 100% Cotton Sizes 28 - 42 $2.97 BEALL'S DOWNTOWN BRYAN 211 North Main with it. I don’t see how you can have the institution you should have by 1976 unless the raw ma terial you have to process becomes substantially less raw than it is at present. I think our colleges and universities must stop trying to teach high school. I don’t be lieve there should be any publicly- supported college or university that should be denied the right to impose entrance examinations and stick by them. I know of no other way that ignorant school boards or lazy school administrations can be spurred into improvement. If you take whatever they choose to throw you you’ll stay in the day nursery business. But if you do impose standards, if you limit your admissions to those who are capable of absorb ing a college education, then the responsibility for improving your own product becomes yours. Then it will be up to you to experiment with, test and adopt with enthusi asm more complicated methods of accelerated teaching. The graduate chemistry of 50 years ago will have to be covered by your sophomore year. The en-. gineering which would have been worth an M.S. at M.I.T. in 1925 must be known to your juniors. Your seniors will have to under stand all the quantum physics of Flanck and Einstein and Teller. By 1976 we will be several light years beyond where we stand now in our knowledge of the cosmos, and yet your future students will be just as eager as your present ones to get out, get a job, get married and get going. In addition, you will, as Presi dent Rudder pointed out, have the problem of including in this pack age the requirements, as he terms it, of American citizenship. This means the humanities. This means an understanding of history, and appreciation of civilization, and a concern for the meaning of life. This is the difference between the educated gentleman and the high ly-trained fool. Your present methods, however modern they may be considered today will be insufficient for this task. The time has already passed when we can affoi’d to expend a semester teaching 25 theorems of Euclidian plane geometry. By 1976 -vye will have to be using subliminal devices not yet thought of, and sleeping students will be getting foreign language conver sation through tiny microphones hidden in their pillows. The human brain is a fantastic instrument. We are only now beginning to un derstand how far we have under estimated its powers of absorp tion. The compression of learning, gentlemen. That, as I see it, is your basic challenge. It will re quire tireless research and bold application. But the stakes are high. They may even be vital to the preservation of free society. Let your motto be the dying words of Louis Pasteur, who looked back upon a life that had astonished the learned world with its fruitfulness. But he murmured sadly: “So little time. So much to learn.” ABSENCE EXCUSED MILWAUKEE )_The Mothers of Twins Club convention had scheduled a panel discussion by parents of twins, but tse meeting had to be cancelled. The leader of the discussion did not arrive in town because his wife was deliver ing their third set of twins. Want To Eat Better For Less? Let One Of HANSON’S Representatives Ex plain At No Obligation “THE BLUE RIBBON FOOD SERVICE.” HANSON’S Can Furnish Food and Freezers Of Your Choice At No Extra Cost To You. Average Cost $13.00 To $14.00 Per Week. HANSON MEATS & FREEZER SERVICE 2701 Texas Ave. M ‘ I ^ TA 2-1316 TA 2-1317 Grant For Bat Study Is Awarded ^he National Institute of Health ha§ awarded a bat study grant of $54,000 to the Department of Wild life Management. The grant was made through the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station. Purpose of the research project, which will cover three years, is to find and identify species of bats and to determine their distribution. Project locations will be southern Mexico, Central America and the northern and western areas of South America. Research will be conducted by Dr. W. B. Davis, head of the De partment of Wildlife Management, and Dilford Cartel’, department in structor. DEVELOPED A T A&M "Plastic Mulcher Planter’ Changes Vegetable Industry A&M researchers have added something new to their still-new system of plastic sheet mulching of vegetables by machine. The workers have added a unique planter wheel to the implement, which allows the farmer to replant the crop if things are botched up the first time. Also, the plastic sheeting can be used for another crop. Developers of the machine, H. T. Blackhurst, professor in the De partment of Horticulture; Clyde Singletary, Texas Agricultural Ex tension Service horticulturist; and A. S. Nemec, skilled mechanic, created a stir among vegetable producers and the farm press when they unveiled their creation this past spring. Now they have gone a step further to make the mulcher do an even more efficient job. Mulching, which controls weeds and conserves moisture, is an age- old practice. It’s usually done with straw, leaves, sawdust and other organic materials. And then in 1953 long sheets of black poly ethylene plastic were introduced for vegetable mulching. The ma terial worked fine, but there was the drawback of manual, laborous installation and seed planting. A&M’s first machine to solve the problem was fairly complete. It carried fertilizer, bed shaper, seeder and a big roll of the plastic sheeting (40 inches wide by 1,000 to 5,000 feet long). The implement planted seed in a continuous stream, fertilized, covered the edges of the pls^i and punched seed emergence hole all in one operation. But if emerging plants fell victim to tk quirks of nature, the whole pfl eedure had to be done over &gs t! using new plastic. New Engineering Students To Meet All new engineering studenti are asked to attend a mcetinj sponsored by the office of ^ Dean of Engineering. The meetint will be held at 7:30 tonight *j Guion Hall. The Church.. for a Fuller Life. For You.. CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH 8:30 A.M.—Cofr 9 :45 11:00 A.M.—Coffee Time A.M.—Sunday School A.M.—Morninu Services BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 8:15 A.M.—Mornintc Worship 9:30 A.M.—Church School 10:46 A.M.— Mornins Worship UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 4:00-5:30 P.M. Friday School. YMCA 8:00 P.M.—First four Sundays of each month—Fellowship Meeting. Call VI G- 6888 for further information. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sundays 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion: 9:15 A.M.—Family Service & Church School : 11:00 A.M.— Holy Communion 1st & 3rd Sundays, Morninjt Prayer 2nd & 4th Sundays ; 7:00 P.M. Evensong. Wednesdays 6:30 & 10:00 A.M.—Holy Communion with I.ayinu on of Hands Saints Days 10:00 A.M. Holy Communion Wednesday 7:10 P.M. Canterbury: 8:30 P.M. Adult Bible Classes FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:15 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :;;0 A.M.—Morninif Worship 7:30 P.M.—Evenlna Service CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morninir Worship (i :30 P.M.—Yt»un« People's Service 7 :30 P.M.—Prcachinu Service CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 2Gth East and Coulter. Bryan 8:80 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting 10.00 A.M. Sunday School 6:30 P.M.— Sacrament Meeting CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9:30 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Sunday Service 8:00 P.M. Wed., EvcninK Service 2 :00 - 4 :00 P.M. Tuesdays - Iteadintf Room 7:00-8:00 P.M. Wed.. UeadinK Room A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:45 A.M.—iijblu ClaHHcm 10:45 A.M. Morning: Worship 6:45 P.M.—Bible Clan* 7 :16 P.M. Evening Service ST. MARY’S CATHOUC CHAPEL 7:30,9:00,11:00 A.M.—Sunday Mas COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9:46 A M 11 :00 A.M. 6:30 P.M. Sunday Mom mi Youmr Even ini A&M METHODIST CHURCH A.M- A 6: P.M. OUR SAVIOUR'S LUTHERAN CHURCH 6 & 10:46 A.M.- The Church Holy Month A.M.—Uiblr A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH If yeari ©Td. SO yoar* old tfi year# old. td years old 14 years old 12 years old 10 years otd A GOOD JOB 4 years old 4 years old l years old Billy’s getting bigger, and Susie's catching up. And Mom—• like any proud mother—is delighted. Their physical progress is one indication that she’s doing a good job. But is she being just as careful about other, equally vital parts of that job? Is she also measuring their spiritual progress? As it happens, she is. Billy and Susie are both already going to church and church school. If you have been thinking that your own children are too young to begin their religious education, why not give them the chance to measure up spiritually, as well as physically? They’re apt to surprise you! THE CHURCH FOR ALL ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest ilding of i. It is Without neither democracy vive. There are fi The Churc rth for th od ci*' spiritual good citizenship dues. on nd factor character . .i ... storehouse of Without a strong Church, ;y nor civilization can sur- are four sound reasons why should attend servi every person should attend services regu larly and Support the Church. They arc: his children's Copyright 1961 Keister Adv. Service, Inc., Strasburg, Va. For his own sake. (2) Foi of hi lake o loral am to church regularly (l)For his own sake. (2) 1'or hi sake. (3) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Chu itself, which needs his moral and mat pport. Plan id 1 and -ead your to go Bible Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday F riday Saturday Book Ephesians Ephesians I John I Timothy Galatians Matthew I Corinthians 13 Chapter Venca MO 1-10 1-5 1-7 23-29 7- 14 8- 13 daily. TTunvraf BRYAN, TEXAS 602 Wiust 26th St PHONE TA 2-1671 Campus and Circle Theatres College Station College Station’s Own Banking Service College Station State Bank NORTH GATE Central Texas Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINAWARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Sure Sign of Flavor Bryan Building City National & Loan Bank Member Association FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION BRYAN Bryan The Exchange Store "Serving Texas Aggies’ ICE CREAM •9 IT^ MUv. "A Nutritious Food"