Thursday, June 9,1983/The Battalion/Page 3 Bidding opens in July for building renovation by Joe Tindel Jr. Battalion Staff Texas A&M’s Facilities Plan ning and Construction Depart ment will open bidding July 6 for a contract to renovate the Civil Engineering Building this fall, the project’s manager said. Advertising for bids on the $2.5 million project began Sun day, and the Texas A&M Board of Regents is expected to award the contract late in July, said Ro ger Killingsworth, planning and estimating supervisor for the de partment’s Facilities Planning Division. Dr. Donald McDonald, head of the civil engineering depart ment, said construction on and renovation of the building prob ably will begin in September and should be completed in about 13 months. McDonald said the building, which has housed the civil en gineering department since the mid-1950s, presently is used pri marily for faculty offices. He said one of the objectives of the renovation is to return it to an academic building with more classroom space, labs and pro ject rooms. Some of the faculty will be moved to the new engineering labs, the Academic and Agency Building and the Highway Re search Center, which is next to the civil engineering building, McDonald said. Much of the project will in volve bringing the building up to modern standards, he said, since this fall’s renovation will be the first work done on the build ing since the 1960s. McDonald said the depart ment has been assigned clas srooms in Goodwin Hall, the Animal Industries building and Zachry Engineering Center this fall to make up for classroom space lost during renovation. staff photo by Brenda Davidson in the C’mon now! )uis Martin, a graduate student in animal science Louis has worked for the beef cattle center Crowley, struggles with a stubborn calf, for several years and is manager of the center. Community education cuts [cross nations, culture the shad* by Robert McGlohon Battalion Staff committf \ Community education is he ms other oming a household word in nr Livifly communities, the director Hexas A&M’s Center of Com- has Diet Prayerl Eugene!] lunity Education says. It cuts cross all classes and cultures, low it cuts across countries, is void oil JRobert Berridge and Dr. y l.etterloBf Whetten, assistant director >r all huniJthe center, travel throughout OR for ’exas helping public school sys- is start community education grams. Not only do they help communities start the sys- 's, but they also train people n them, evaluate them after y have started, and furnish \ #^Bp rrnat i° n on funding V \f ^‘In addition to that, we do a of one-on-one consulta- is,” Berridge said. “We don’t ithere and philosophize, we go Tices onh® to the individual schools.” i dumpili®fter attending a workshop as-beens lere conducted by the center, a li^l sJpresentative from the Lima, feru, school system asked the Miter to conduct a similar work- “' Ildlstlc hop there. B(The program) was very witful,” said Whetten. Now you know buz/"' 0 BL’hetten said that the colleges rivate-sedj tions.” J«P peciaBj] 1 it. of'Conf Jail,” Cap' and than' C L Press International ; (( i Although remembered for in- renting the telephone, Alexan- • ' ier Graham Bell also dabbled in hath 1 boatbuilding. In 1918 he helped n rest! develop a hydrofil that set a i do. fcorld water speed record of 70 field is i ] miles an hour, ids andfi igainst ignore me are ®' ogist Vic® in’t start* and universities not involved in ternationally are missing a tremendous opportunity. “Educators throughout the world are increasingly sharing approaches and problem solving techniques,” Whetten said. “Educational concerns can no longer be viewed from a local standpoint only.” Nor can they be viewed only from a standpoint of the tradi tional three Rs for the tradition al 12 years, Berridge said. “Maybe the system we’ve been using for 200 years needs to change somewhat,” he said. “And that’s what we’re trying to do.” The Center of Community Education, a division of the De partment of Educational Admi nistration, is one of 15 in the United States. It has helped establish more than 100 com munity education systems throughout Texas. Both Whet ten and Berridge hope that’sjust the beginning. “We’re really building an atti tude,” Whetten said. “Community schools provide what the community has said it wants, not what a school official says it needs,” Whetten said. And that, he said, is the beauty of the system. Community education is an organized effort to integrate a communities educational, social, physical, recreational and health programs for people of all ages. Commonly, through state and privately funded offices, public school systems open their build ings, at nights, on weekends and during the summer to commun ity education classes of all sizes and types. Reading, writing, arithmetic, baseball, bellydancing, ballet, computing, cooking, account ing, aerobics, drafting and drumming are just a few 7 of the courses offered through com munity education programs. “What we’re really looking at is changing the concept from schooling to education,” Ber ridge said. “We’re trying to get people to realize that, in our high-tech society, education is lifelong. We’re trying to get the parents back to school.” Whetten added, “In a com munity school, the doors are li terally opened up to the com munity.” And that, both educators said, produces amazing spin-offs. Research the center has con ducted indicates that systems with community education are more successful in selling school bonds; have higher attendance, better discipline and less vandal ism in their regular schools; and have a higher degree of com munity awareness and involve ment. “(People involved in com munity education) say it has re juvenated their communities,” Berridge said. 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