Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, April 26, 1962 SPECIAL SPRING PROMOTION Regular $259.95 Value For A Limited Time No Money Down [SISl The Syracuse ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 23” Television Hand Wired Power Transformer Chassis Genuine Walnut Veneer 23,000 Volts of Picture Power High Fidelity Audio - 2 Hi Fi Speakers GIL’S RADIO & TV 2403 So. College TA 2-0826 Training Ship For TMA Students Now ' ' -4.' i In Reserve Fleet A training ship has been ob tained for the Texas Maritime Academy, Capt. Bennett M. Dod son, superintendent of the new academy, said today. Dodson went to New Orleans last week to obtain a training ship from the Maine Maritime Academy, the “State of Maine,” to be used for summer cruises by TMA cadets. The U. S. Maritime Adminis tration has arranged for the ship to be put in the reserve fleet at Beaumont. It will be kept there until the TMA accepts the ship in about two years, Dodson said. The “State of Maine” is the former World War II hospital ship, “Comfort.” Dodson comment ed that it is an ideal training ship. Dodson also went through a shipping warehouse while in the Cresent City to select instru ments and equipment to be used in the TMA’s nautical and engineer ing labs. Included were sextants, gyroscopes and drafting equip ment. : '•VJvMv m Mr l? •- 82s 5 ; , • wmwpWfr* tyfy {".T, ■ : V-d'lA •SAM ?f rr-.tai aUKi Hi / /i Four Vets Get NSF Researcli Fellowships Four sophomore veterinaryrr* icine students have been seleo_ as participants in the Natioii® 1 ''‘ UR< Science Foundation Undergradci Research Program for the surr^ of 1962. They are Michael E. Seaquii: Palacios, Richard L. Forgasor. Hunger ford, Charles L. Halh Dallas and Arvle E. Marshall,: Canyon. The program provides a slip of $600 for a 12-week period ji- ing the summer for each of fo Hider ausp TMA Training Ship * The “State of Maine”, a converted hospital Academy cadets. It will be put in the re ship which was being - used by the Maine serve fleet at Beaumont until it is claimed Maritime Academy, will be the training ship by the Texas school in about two years, for summer cruises by the Texas Maritime State Art Contest To Be Held In May Art exhibits from 19 Texas counties will be judged here in May as part of state-wide compe tition sponsored by the Texas Fine Arts Association. Bill Hite, assistant programs and creative arts advisor of the Memorial Student Center, said the show is sponsored by the Creative Arts Committee of the MSC for Regions 5 and 7 of the Regional State Citation Exhibit. Deadline for entries in the con test judging will be May 18, and anyone living within the 19-county area is eligible to participate. A $2 fee per entry will be charged he said. Exhibits winning cita tions will be sent to Austin for 'state-wide competition. Profs Asked To ‘Find Out How Smart Students Are’ students engaged in full-time« search on diseases of livestock;: poultry. Selection of the participat was made by a committee of: Rr when Department of Veterinary Jls: oi the colic biology. The department will i of “The ■legram. critic E. Cl 1 By E. ( Ja lusty, ■sciplined ■onday ni Bidets of lared in i ■mior Hi ■&M Glut l&M Motl ■There a ■aybeard rect the research. The participants were selectBily in from students basing comp© the second year of the professioi st ndards curriculum in the School of \i ■dex of erinary Medicine. Criteria forsBudents a lection were scholastic achie meat and interest in researcli a career. Break with the academic status quo and give your students a chance to show how struirt they are! That’s what the arts and sci ences faculty were told by Dr. W. W. Hagerty, engineering dean at the University of Texas. Speaking at the annual faculty meeting of the School of Arts and Sciences, Hagerty outlined the “Dangers of Academic Status Quo” and criticized college teaching methods everywhere. “We teach like we were taught —or how we think we were taught,” he said. In so doing, “We’re trying to reproduce our selves.” This is not giving today’s col lege students what they need to meet the requirements of the fu ture. He predicted that a large- lively Mikki Peiiottieri Jclane '63 Oklahoma born Mlhkl Pellettleri now calls Houston, Texas, her home. She’s Secretary of the Tulane Student Council. lives it cp with this lively One frow foro'62: the New lairlaNe 500 Sports Cocpe! Mikki Pellettleri, a Year Book Beauty, has her mind on snug-fitting bucket seats. An-optional torrid Challenger Psychology and her eye on the all-new Fairlane 500 260 V-8 engine delivers high-velocity perform- Sports Coupe. This Fairlane “a la king” combines ance on regular gas. See the exciting Fairlane A productct trimmed-for-action outside dimensions with carriage 500 Sports Coupe and all the Lively Ones at trade interior appointments, between-seats console, and yourFord Dealer’s—the liveliest place in town! motorcompany iWiiisi scale change in college teaching is in order—something comparable to the magnitude of the rapi^l tech nological changes today. “The danger in not changing is not because of competion with an other society like Russia,” he said. “The danger is that we won’t ob tain maximum benefit from our own society.” Adhering strictly to an academic schedule of courses often stifles creativity in excellent studerits while the “best” students are often those with the best “feedback” ability, he noted. The engineering dean, whose earlier academic years were spent at the University of Minnesota, approved the policy of college English departments of putting more emphasis on development of ideas and less on rhetoric. “I would rather have a student who has ideas and can express himself—give or take a few mis spelled words,” he said, adding it is more important to teach stu dents to grasp abstract principles, to give them a sense of thinking at an abstract level. “I don’t think we’re coming any where near taxing the capacity of students,” Hagerty said. “They have never failed to respond to real academic challenge. . .give them a chance to show how smart they are!” Marshall and Hall will cone: investigations of tissue cultures cytofluorescent antibody stain: techniques for the detection t control of diseases. Marshal ‘‘.Solomon Ivity has This gri a school v ■usic depi ivity witt Ispiration Ir these pate in cb a sacred the son of Mr. and Mrs. Doufis Bought t itere is n |nement i The pro Marshall of Canyon, and Halls the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Hi of 5134 Goodwin in Dallas. Hi was an assistant county agri:.-|everything tural agent in Palestine for Mines, as 1 and a half years. I bit fro Forgason, the son of Mr. uArber sh Mrs. Lanier H. Forgason of fc-Bental n: gerford, will investigate metW®!hisholm of anaplasmosis control in catuBrail”; si Seaquist will conduct research avian encephalomyelitis, a vire discus* of poultry. An Open Letter loThe Students Of A&M Dear Student and Friend: The challenge of this space age in which we are living is OURS-YOURS AND MINE. We are the age group that must accept and meet this challenge if our way of life is to be preserved. I ask you to join with me in meeting this challenge. Give me the benefit of your knowledge of this space age; the benefit of your youthful outlook; the benefit of your courage; the benefit of your council. Together let us meet this challenge as all young men before us have done. Give me your vote for Governor on May 5. Give me your active support in this campaign for Governor. Together let us MAKE TEXAS FIRST. Give me your support and I promise you honesty and efficiency in our State Government. Very Sincerely yours Don Yarborough (Paid Political Ad) •ted; fa lines, anc | Nor wa In Stilly lone with le a sur lat one Mctivities fnging o The mu Spirit of Ive from Woone, w public scl his ov |uperior [Uracy of B SVj | W daj U per 4 p.r 1952 TD funnel co\ fverhauled. Chrysler l s ed three 1594. I Long |15.00. fo „ \ |3.00. See Baby dc .Study fo |nair, good “ P. m. Boat, t: •hotor, ca Bloving. C BLUE 1 lecond car pnd heate: _ lot PPECIAL T. V., Trz 713 S. A SAE £ Major For y AT a Plenty the co DIS Brake Pumps Solem on jug car. 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