'25,198; tation.Tc \ fage 1.) w: lei, Wng is tj :lassroot. almost) ts and memlic; 9 years,; t Soutb; Collegt Univen: Children’s Camp Begins June 14 THE BATTALION Thursday, May 25, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 5 United States Has Small Naval Force Near Red Sea Area The second annual Fun and Frolic Day Camp for retarded children is to be held this year, starting June 14-16 and June 19- 23, from 9:30 to 2:30 daily. There will be a two-day teen age counselor and adult super visor orientation session on June 12 and 13 at the camp ground from 9:30 a.m. to noon. The camp program includes various arts and crafts, physical group participation games, swim- 0 the a j m ing and other camp activities. A noon meal will be served. Since the camp is on the out skirts of town, there will be a pickup and return point at the iesatd Bryan Boy’s Club, 900 W. 25th also stui j Street for the Bryan children. The pickup point for the Col- ;y of lege Station children will be at sityofl | Lincoln Elementtary School. A 1 in M bus will leave no later than 9 ique ati! a.m. each day from each place, est of: This will be the first group project for the TARS. After the lifficulti camp session is over, they will proceed to an Arts and Craft pro gram and a swimming program. The TARS group is sponsored j by the Bryan, College Station :ofessotI :ful prfj, iss to u : latest discipt ding te the citai in Cki igrees ft e and i Univerj Area Association for the Ment ally Retarded Children. The pur- f ArlmB P ose or f? an i za ti° n onoreJ; ; provide an opportunity for teen- iplishE iM in 1S : with Ta 1940’s, 1 more th and sk lis citai:: le for ificant pa taduate: State i two g£ Univen Summer Institute For Teachers Set By Department A summer institute for teach ers of educationally deprived children will be held at Texas A&M July 17-Aug. 18 by the Education and Psychology De partment. , Held in cooperation with •enson; B r y an Public Schools, the two- course institute will offer special iniqueii o app® 1 training for teachers of educa- om a rc it, and are es'i rlts t»j eful >F? '0 dep* ther fr He $ 346. narilf that T 5 as | mts- r. Gr« ri luring *e a s* the M e scli^ five y* 15 1 0 ames ranced : ersitf vith ^ for lation lacher- extent- condn 11 * iooIs c - ?orksW iroug^ 3 de^ U5l c ' for >nt ^ Ashci 5 -'' ied $ >sear; : ' : ures i 0 e it^ iter ie $ nin? : tes# ■aisf' cu# :h tion- r on I met'' -incit' scier" lyn^ i cad'' jcti^ ie'f doc^ ►tes ’ is ^ he '■ rsirT le? und •otic^ >f et^ trse' do»"' sd* si T«^ ECt tionally and culturally deprived children in kindergarten through the eighth grade. “Special summer remedial classes in Bryan schools will be used as supervised observation and practice laboratory during the mornings with lectures and discussions from 1 to 3 p.m. afternoons,” noted Dr. Paul Hen- sarling, education and psychology >p IC- ' head. Bryan elementary supervisors and the university faculty will work together, he added. Classes on campus will meet in the air- conditioned Military Science Building. Courses involved in the six semester hour institute will be instructed by Dr. Walter Varvel of A&M and the Bryan element ary education director, Stephen D. Pearce. Education 637, ad vanced elementary methods will give special emphasis to adapt ing the reading program to fit needs of the culturally different child. Varvel will instruct Psychology 634, principles of human growth and development. In the course, students will consider social- psychological characteristics and developmental backgrounds. Institute participants can earn six hours credit as a special stu dent or to apply toward a gradu ate degree or professional certifi cation, Hensarling explained. Participants will be presently employed teachers or have their superintendent’s endorsement for placement in September. Herbich Attends Water Meeting Dr. John B. Herbich, civil engi neering professor at Texas A&M is attending the International Conference on Water for Peace in Washington, D. C. The conference, which began Tuesday and continues through May 31, was proposed initially by President Johnson to bring together political leaders and ex perts from various nations to ex plore water problems of the World, technical and administra tive means for attacking and solving problems in water re sources conservation, development and utilizations. Specific subjects include urban, industrial and rural water sup ply; agriculture and fishery re sources; river basin development, Navigation, flood control and recretion, water pollution control, desalinization, water reuse and Water management. A paper by Dr. Herbich, head of the hydraulic, coastal engineer ing and fluid mechanics division of A&M’s Civil Engineering De partment, has been accepted for publication in conference proceed ing. It is entitled “Quality Changes in Surface Waters Caused by Engineering Projects.” agers in B-CS to learn more about Mental Retardation and how they can help in the solution to some of these problems. The camp program is conducted by the Bryan Boy’s Club and Bravos Valley Rehabilitation Cen ter with Mrs. Carolyn Lewis as camp director. The sponsorship is by the following organizations: B-CS JayCees, B-CS Rotary Club, Bryan Kiwanis Club, College Sta tion Kiwanis Club, B-CS Area Association for the Mentally Re tarded and the Recreational De partment, City of Bryan. WASHINGTON ) _ The Unitted States has only a tiny “show the flag” naval force in the Red Sea in position to chal lenge Egypt’s announced block ade of the Gulf of Aqaba. This force currently is made up of a single destroyer, the 2,- 200-ton Fi s k e , and converted peaplane tender, the Valcour, which serves as a flagship. A second destroyer, the Jo seph P. Kennedy Jr., was last reported down around Malagasy Republic and may be moving up to the Red Sea. The only way the warships of the big U. S. 6th Fleet can reach the crisis area from the Medi- teranean — short of circling all of Africa — would be to pass through the Suez Canal. Egypt might dispute such passage with shore guns. However, the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba is only about 500 miles from where the aircraft carier Saratoga was last report ed steaming off the island of Crete in the mediterranean. DEXTER HAND SEWN MOGS at Stnrius ^ ^ mcnb uicnr Kodacolor Instamatic NO. 126—12 EXPOSURE ROLL DEVELOPED & PRINTED WHY PAY MORE? 20 Exposures $3.20 P. O. Box 4, Ft. Worth, Texas 76101 ijr r Introducing the new 1967 Jack Nicklaus Autograph GOLF BALLS A tough, SAFETY CHAMPION • Reversible GW flexible metal spout • Deluxe plastic vent • Metallic red with yellow trim ] A popular priced tire with FULL 4 PLY NYLON CORD BODY! AVAILABLE NOW ! PRICES START AT. 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