Texas A&M e are ■ increase iii mission staii ; effect last! e no ng the it Kimrfj No 162 USPS 045360 10 Pages fable ounr 1 rter said. ia er faculty, J [liliarwitlt ested tltiriiij lion Serving the University community College Station, Texas Thursday, June 16, 1983 l second ment willpi| i this sessiorii other recotll aton cites reasons not top school by Scott Griffin Battalion Staff life it ranks sixth in the nation in umber of National Merit Scholars nrolled, Texas A&M University has rme major problems to correct be- ■ it can be considered a “world ■ university” says an academic Bial here. |[T)r Gordon Eaton, provost and ce-president of academic affairs, uesday said Texas A&M cannot be nsidered a “world university” and cited five major problems that the school from attaining that ie first of the problems, Eaton said, money. ■Today’s education involves more ■ just the students and profes- )rs,” Eaton said. “Studios, laborator- pind equipment are now a necessi- Plan for ty, and equipment is becoming ex ceedingly expensive. Eaton pointed out that the money shortage can’t be blamed on the school. “The state has done a very poor job of funding this school in terms of equipment,” he said, “and there’s not a department or college at this university which couldn’t use some more equipment.” Engineering alone asked for about $27 million,” he said, “and they’re going to wind up with only about $1 million.” Eaton said another major problem is the University’s lack of computers. “This University is just emerging from the dark ages as far as comput ing facilities and computer literacy is concerned on the part of both the students and faculty,” he said. A third problem area, which Eaton said is undergoing change, concerns entrance standards. “We will continue to raise com bined SAT scores for admission,” Eaton said. “You can raise the acade mic performance level to one of grea ter excellence by making it harder to get in, thereby drawing better stu dents.” Another problem, and one which may be considerably more difficult to correct, is rampant growth. “One thing this school must do in order to provide a quality education is to reduce class size,” he said. “When you’re sitting in a classroom with 300 other people, you’re not getting a quality education.” See EATON page 9 desegregation colleges OK’d LO. all ns r with a i limited m save perma- •rt curly wavy ) make manage humid ummer.