Tourist Queen It came as no surprise to the friends of Gayle Southerland, of Harlingen, when she was chosen Rio Grande Valley Turista Fiesta Queen for the year of 1962, from a field of 19 contestants. This the latest of many honors received by this pretty high school miss, whose personality is as attrac tive as she is. (AP Photo) Industrial Arts Have Real Value Industi'ial arts have a value for all in the total education program of secondary school, more that 500 industrial teachers were told here. Dr. G. Wesley Ketcham, state consultant for industrial arts in Connecticut, said the industrial arts role in education is development of a practical understanding and ap preciation of today’s industrial and technical society. He spoke at the 14th annual In dustrial Teacher Conference spon sored by the Texas Industi'ial Arts Association and the Depart ment of Industrial Education. Dr. John P. Walsh, director of the U. S. Office of Education’s Trade and Industrial Branch, dis cussed the role of trade and in dustrial education in meeting to day’s needs for manpower training and utilization with vocational trade teachers. Ketcham reminded the teachers that industrial arts provide the basic orientation to students about occupations that require techni cal skills. He noted that for every 100 skilled workers that the nation had in 1955, it will need 122 in 1965 and 145 in 1975. But the na tion’s spotty training programs are not even turning out enough new craftsmen to replace those who retire. “As technological unemployment mounts and the shortage of skilled workers and technicians continues, pressures on school administrators will bring more problems to the shops and drafting rooms through out the country,” he predicted. That’s What You Get Showing Off FORT WORTH — A pretty 21-year-old blonde, with a smile on her lips and silverware in her tummy, told Wednesday how she “lost control” of a fork and swal lowed it. “It Was easy,” Athaleene La- Rae Peterson, an accountant, said from her hospital bed. Miss Peterson said she and a friend were in a downtown coffee shop Tuesday night when the In cident occurred. She said she was discussing her tonsils at the time. “I was holding my tongue down No Fancy Offers Available From Campus Interviewers With the crop of college grad uates small and the competition among employers more intense than ever, it would seem a rea sonable assumption that some fancy wheeling and dealing might be going on as more recruiters descend upon the campus. Not so, says the College Placement Coun cil’s continuing national survey of fers in which the A&M Placement Office is participating. Of course it’s only mid-season in the man-hunt that is concentrat ed largely at about one thousand colleges and universities but the re cruiting process thus far, while the keenest in years, has been re markably free of inflated offers. In the mid-season report, re leased to some two thousand ma jor employers and over a thousand college placement officers, the Council found aircraft manufac turers in the lead both in terms of the dollar average of their offers ($567 per month) and in the volume of their offers. Electronic firms were close be hind at $564 but ranked third in volume of offers. The new chal lenger which moved, since the Council’s January report, from seventh place to second in volume 13th Annual Mechanical Meet Nears The 13th annual A&M Depart ment of Journalism Texas Press Association Mechanical Conference and Photo Workshop will begin here Friday at 1 p.m. with the photo workshop in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. Photography and printing speci alists from throughout the United States will attend the two-day ses sion. Printing will be discussed in sessions all day Saturday in the MSC Assembly Room. Photographic door prizes and samples will be given paid regist rants at the conference. Students and college employees may attend free. Specialists Who will conduct photo sessions Friday are Duval F. Moss Jr., Plasselblad; Isabel H. Shirley, Caprod Ltd., New York; Dr. Otha C. Spencer, Deparment of Communications, East Texas State College; Frank M. Parks, Sylvania; John Farnham, ANSCO; Gordon Craig, Polaroid; and re presentatives of Fotorite Inc. and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A darkroom practice session will be held Friday, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 5 of Nagle Hall. with the fork handle,” she ex plained. “I got to laughing and it just went down.” “When I got up this morning, I felt it stick me but it didn’t hurt... no one will ever believe it,” she said blushing. WINS^ Everything you need for a super Summer! • Air Mattress witfl Built-In Pump • 12" Barbecue Grllf • 4-Piece Badminton Set , • 3-Pfece Swim Set—’ Snorkel, Mask & Flippers • Bongo Drums NOT A CONTEST! NOTHING TO BUY! DRAWING AT 4 P. M. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7 The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” of offers and to third in salary value ($555) was the chemical, drug, and allied products field. In the face of the hue and cry for engineering graduates, how ever, the Council’s copyrighted survey revealed that the average of beginning salary offers to tech nical graduates has held steady at exactly $562 from the initial report two months ago, to the present. Non-technical graduates during the same period were at tracting an average of $16 a month more. Most dramatic increase was one of $33 per month in offerings to liberal arts graduates and of $23 per month to students major ing in accounting. The survey, based on data com puted each week from actual be ginning salary offers reported by 82 selected colleges from coast to coast, is now in its third year and has earned a reputation for reli ability in a field where previously salary determination was largely a matter of speculation. Statistics just released include the average dollar value of 5,155 offers made thus far by employ ers to students attending these selected colleges and are indicative of offers being made to some quar ter of a million male graduates of 1962. In spite of increasing competi tion for graduates, the average dollar value of offers to techni cally trained graduates has increas ed only 2.9% since the close of the last recruiting season while the non-technical graduates are being offered 4.6% more, according to Wendell R. Horsley of A&M, chair man of the Salary Survey Com mittee. These percentages reflect an increase over the past year from $546 to $562 per month for technical graduates and from $452 to $473 for non-technicals. The curriculum attracting both the greatest volume of offers and the highest salaries is electrical engineering, at $573 per month, followed by mechanical engineer ing which ranked second in volume but fourth in dollar value of offers at $557. The salary survey is conducted by the non-profit College Place ment Council of Bethlehem, Pa., national headquarters of the eight regfbnal placement associations of the United States and Canada. It reports beginning salary offers currently being made to male stu dents in 11 key curricula by 16 of the most active employer groups in the recruiting field. The next and final report for the year will be compiled in June. THE BATTALION Thursday, March 1,1962 College Station, Texas Page 3 Read Battalion Classifieds Daily epsaMt TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE I NEW 62 CELEBRITY NYLON EXTRA 1 RIDE THE /£^«7v\ KEUTBiAP (^g) JOE FAULK AUTO 220 E. 25th TA 2-1669 YOUR KELLY CAR SAFETY CENTER WE KEEP PRICES DOWN BEEF STAMPEED! SAVINGS ON CHOICE NORTHERN CORN FED BEEF! U.S. CHOICE TENDER-AGED BEEF Mimm STEAEC SIRLOIN BEEF Lb. BEEF STEAK 79 C lb T-BONE 89 BEEF STEAK c lb These Prices Good thru Sat. March 3. We re serve the right to limit quantity. PRIME RIBS PEACHES ROAST 6th & 7th Cut LB. FOOD CLUB Sliced or Halves 59« N0 - 21 /s I CANS | DETERGENT Food Club TOPCO ^2^ G sfzE T ^|1| PINEAPPLE JUICE4 ‘- $1 CATSUP RED APPLES DEL MONTE or FOOD CLUB U. S. NO. 1 WASH. WINESAP BUs!’ LB. 1 2 C BOLOGNA RATH BLACK HAWK PIECE LB. 29