Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 157, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1965 Page: 3 of 22
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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PAGE THREE
Thuri»diy. February 11, 1965
15
Education Problems Discussed
Gift Your Valentine
1
With Special Buys
Panel At Annual Junior College Conference Views Governors Plans For State
From Beall's!
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way lie put it. “If we're going
2
By that time, more than 30
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ions of the majority of the com
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red on every point.” He said one [
point that all 25 members did
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THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
mittee, “There was no minori-
ence . . . then, wham!”
M * A
a while, and they get experi
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on a panel on the State Legisla- sal which rests with appropria- cation."
tive Program for Junior Col- tions committees of House and' He said he wasn’t concerned
leges. Senate. with status, but worried about
Two of them, Dr. A. B Mar- He said he had pointed out; the senior colleges search for
fin of Amarillo Junior College the fact that Connally's bill was .status through conversion to
and Ben Jones of Navarro Jun- open-ended; that it would let universities. He said: “If every
for College, served on Gov.: new junior colleges come in and senior college becomes a uni-
John Connally’s Committee on "thin out" the money earmark- versify, what are we going “
Education Beyond the High ed for existing schools. He said ( be? Junior universities?”
Bill Utter - Ford, Inc., 419 South Elm
lege: Grady C. Hogue of Cisco •
Junior College. and Clyde B. colleges are
Nails of San Antonio College.
900
• 50% AVRIL RAYON
• 50% COTTON
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3) >
A ho . . . ossorted- styles tn 100% cot-
tons and chinos. Values to 2.93 each. Col-
ors consist of dark tones and assorted pas-
tels.
schools in the state that do not
have a floor under their salar- “
ies.” •
‘ He said the average is about
$6,000 a year, compared to
... , about $7,200 for senior college
to .Agency. teachers, and claimed that in-
just as Thomas M. Spencer dustry and other states stage or-
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Austin Bureau agree on was that Texas should assured that our boards will op- people to 166 types of specializ- "enough" of a budget.
AUSTIN — With a “captive” (undertake a broadened view of erate as they have always oper- ed work in 31 major fields had "Enough," he explained, “is
auidence of junior college board a junior college program. ated. I know changes have to been developed, and the total when the Legislature will pay
members from many cities, six Jones, the other junior col come to make progress, but cost of the technical education instructional, costs on a fairly
junior college administrators lege representative on the gov- you know changes don't always program over the next two years adequate plan.”
had a chance to drive homeernor’s committee, said Martin mean progress." would be $12, 753,944; less than Colvert said that public
some pressing educational prob-1 had covered his subject. Then; Parker took his alloted five half of the federal government’s schoolchildren havebeen guar, j
lems and they made the most he reported that he had talked minutes to state his belief: "I allocation for vocational and Inteed teachers who receive a i
of the chance. to “the governor’s office” Mon- think we're headed for a greatly technical education in that per- salary and senior
The occasion was the 24th an- day morning about the fact that improved educational system, iod of time. colege students have been
nualJunior. College conference the governor’s junior college binl because we all tend to become Nails Mid: “A technical edu- guaranteed teachers who.re-
in the Stephen F. Austin Hotel (not yet introduced! conflicted what we think about, and today, . nroem . uuei,. a _ winiwi 2′1", 1611 I
The six administrators served with the junior colleges' propo- we’re thinking about higher edu- programisexpensi act j % 11 . - ■ rsalary, aut
on a nane on IL. Stt 1°giel. cal uwhndc witLSnrrNriA. "tiln " is not just a program for cast- junior colleges are the only .
School. The others were Wayne the matter would be taken care Although other panelists ver- Sr. of San Jacinto College in ganized rais in which they cap-
Matthews of Southwest Union of, and in commenting on Con- bally cringed at the thought of Padadena was closing out the ture Texas junior college teach-
College, Uvalde; John Parker nally’s support of junior college an ' all-powerful coordinating panel discussion, C. C. Colvert, ers with the bait of higher pay.
of Cooke County Junior Col-proposals, said board and seemed to pray that University of Texas staff mem-1 „w get . here, keen ,em
"it looks to me like the junior (“the promise" that local junior ber who is secretary to the - ’ •
- -3! leges are now in a positioncollege boards would continue Junior College fonferene I
for the very first time to get a to operate as they now do will jumped to his feet.
Martin led off with a review whole loaf, instead of a half be kept, Hogue said reasonable L i.
of the governor’s committee’s loaf." coordination may be a saving ninttehadnassed andthe toI-to meet the responsibility of
recommendations on achieving Sounding like the beginning of grace. And he approached an- , , the discussion. ,hP state educating the masses of youth
exeellenceinshighereducationia chainletter, Matthews, said other worry—loss, of certain Legisiatave program rorJunjor which wil be descending on us,
3 Subject as famlllar as catech- Jones had covered his subject. nmornmc tn avnir ddannliratinn 5 gum . 9
(Colleges—had been touched but -we must have instructional i
(briefly. -costs to guarantee young peo-
I Colvert said the junior col- ple
was the
> a cnam etten, Mauewssa other Vn, ____ — ___-_____
a subject as familiar as catech- .Jones had covered his subject, programs to avoid duplication
ion to the audience. Then Matthews said the greatest. of offerings in a region—by
Martin said that the recom- challenge to junior colleges, as saying: "To move to eliminate
mendations— including a strong he saw it, was to cut down the duplication of offerings may be Colvert said the junior col- ple a fairly adequately paid'
coordinating board for senior drop-out rate, and try to capture good for uS Maybe an outsider' lege board members needed to teacher 1
and junior colleges, that the the interest of the dropouts, has come up with an approach know the philosophy behind the
state pay all junior college in- whom he described as ' mostly Iroblem we weren’t wPIini junior college’s request to the
structional costs, and that a (quitters, and mostly job hop- toface” Legislature that instructional1
10-year program be pursued to pers." . . . (costs he assumed by the state,
make Texas second to none in ( Matthews said he didn’t know „ man Irom an Antonio “You need to know,”.he said,
education— represented the opin- what the governor meant by'College addressed the results of "Because it’s up to you to write
" >.... —i-t . .u — “strong” in requesting the Leg'- a study, on vocational and tech- your senators and your legisla-;
islature to authorize a strong meal education in which he par- tors and explain it to them.”
coordinating board.” He said: ticipated with other members of
("I don!t:know what that board's'a Public Junior Colleges Asso- We said .that for 16 years, ,
power would be, but I m con- ciation committee. Nails said junior college administrators
cerned with power. We've been that a plan to educate young have
1
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 157, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1965, newspaper, February 11, 1965; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1532111/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.