5 Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, October 13, 1960 Native Of Turkey Named To Faculty Sulhi H. Yungul has joined the staff of the Department of Geol ogy and Geophysics, S. A. Lynch, Head of the Department, has an nounced. He is assistant profes sor of geophysics. He has had approximately 15 years experience in geophysical exploration and research for oil and minerals. During this time he has made significant research contribution to seismic, gravity and electrical methods for oil prospecting and is recognized as one of the leading authorities in the United States on electrical methods of prospecting. Yungul was born in Instanbul, Turkey, in 1919. From 1938-1939 he attended the Mathematiques Speciales school in Tours, France, where he was awarded the prize in mathematics. In 1943 he re ceived a BS degree in Mining En gineering from the Montana School of Mines. His graduate work was done at the California Institute of Technology, where he received an MS degree in Geophysics in 1944 and the degree of Geophysical Engineering in 1945. From 1945 to 1952 he was a party chief, supervisor and chief geophysicist for the MTA Enstitu- su (Mineral Research and Explora tion Institute) of Turkey. From COEDS (Continued From Page 1) and claimed no state school but A&M offered such a degree. The Waco court said Miss Allred had never made application to study floriculture at A&M. Waco Court’s Opinion Then Judge Jake Tirey, associate justice of the appellate court, wrote in his May 19 opinion: “We feel it is our duty to say in event Miss Allred makes appli cation for admission to A&M to pursue such a course, she should be permitted to do so and not ex cluded solely on the ground of sex.” When the Waco court considered the motion for rehearing on June 9, State Attorney General Will Wilson asked that the portion of Judge Tirey’s opinion pertaining to Miss Allred and the degree in flori- I culture be stricken from the i - ecord. The attorney general said the statement constituted “dictum not Accessary to the decision .or judg ment of the court.” The request to strike part of the opinion was granted. Make Your Christmas Reservations Now beverley hraley tours • travel service Mem. Student Center VI 6-7744 TYPEWRITERS Rental — Sales Service — Terms DISTRIBUTORS FOR: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 AGGIES NEED ANY WELDING DONE ? ? ? ? ★ BUILD FURNITURE, TRAILERS, ETC. ★ BUILD GO-KARTS ★ WELD ALUMINIUM HEADS & MANIFOLDS Call On SPAW’S WELDING SHOP VI 6-7209, Night VI 6-8367 (Next To Marion Pugh Lumber Company) 1952 -1955 he was employed as chief geophysicist by Etibank, a government controlled mineral ex ploitation organization in Turkey. He came to tbe United States in 1954 and became naturalized in 1958. From 1955-1960 he was both research geophysicist and senior research geophysicist with the California Research Corp. in La- Habra, Calif. Yungul has written a number of articles which have been pub lished in technical journals, both in the United States and Turkey. He has also written a number of company-classified reports on his researches at the California Re search Corp. Mr. and Mrs. Yungul have two children. CONFERENCE (Continued From Page 1) William Anthony Hunt, president of Howard County Junior College. The discussion on English will be under the direction of Joseph Davis, Dean of Amarillo College. Members of the panel wil be Miss Dorothy Davidson, consultant on curriculum, Texas Education Agency; Dr. Vernon Lynch, Del Mar College; Mrs. Dean Fuller, Paris Junior College; and Dr. S. S. Morgan, Head of the Department of English at A&M. Moderator of the discussion will be John O. West, professor of English at Odessa College. Dinner Monday Evening Monday evening there will be a dinner in the Assembly Room of the MSG. J. W. Dillard, presi dent of Frank Phillips College, will preside and the invocation will be given by Gaston T. Gooch, Dean of Navarro College. Music will be by The Singing Cadets. Dr. Peter W. Guenther, of St. Mary’s University, will give the address, “Modern Man and the Liberal Arts.” American, Twelve Cubans Executed For Plotting Overthrow of Castro Great Issues Speaker Charles B. Shuman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation,' will speak Wednesday as the first of a series of Great Issues speakers. Shuman, whose address is,set at 8 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, will talk on “What Should Be The Future Agricultural Policy Of This Nation?” (See Story On Page 1). Third TV Debate Scheduled Tonight NEW YORK—The third of the presidential campaign debates to night will be a split-screen, trans continental show on television. Staged by the American Broad casting Co., it will find Republi can candidate Richard M. Nixon in Los Angeles and Democratic candidate John F. Kennedy in New York. The hour-long program goes on the TV network at 6:30 p.m. EST. Identical TV studio sets have been erected in each city, with a combination podium and desk which will allow each candidate to sit or stand as he chooses. Both candidates have been asked to wear the same shade of attire and studio lighting has been dupli cated at each end of the network. ABC called it the most difficult and complicated telecast in broad cast history, and assigned more than 200 technicians to the pro gram. Both previous debates have found the two candidates in the same studio. The first was han dled by CBS from Chicago, the second by NBC from Washington. The last of four originally scheduled debates is set for Oct. 21. , - ^ ' >' w ££ v g| 1 By The Associated Press HAVANA—A young American adventurer and 12 Cubans were executed today for plotting to over throw Prime Minister Fidel Castro. The American, first to be ex ecuted by the Castro regime, was Anthony Zarba of Somerville, Mass. He went before a firing- squad in Santiago with seven Cuban companions. Havana radio stations reported five other Cubans were executed in Santa Clara. Zarbo and his companions had been convicted only hours before by a revolutionary military court of staging a Castro-style invasion to set up a guerrilla front in Cuba. Two At a Time The eight prisoners were led be fore four different firing squads near Santiago, two at a time. The reports of the first rifles cracked down the San Juan Valley firing range at 4:50 a.m. Havana radio stations said an- your telephone is W \ Ji u- < I as wM as heard si I ,4k order your telephones in color today! The Southwestern States Telephone Company other firing squad in the provincial capital of Santa Clara, in central Cuba, executed five insurgents captured in the Escambray Moun tains. Two were reported to have been rebel leaders. Radio VOZ in Havan said the firing ■ squads were composed of militiamen. The duty officer at Santa Clara militatry headquarters said he had no immediate informa tion on executions there, but the government-controlled stations usually are well informed. First U. S. Citizen Zarba, a 27-year-o!d-adventurer who landed on the northeast coast of Cuba with a small party of invaders last week, was the first U. S. citizens to die before a Castro firing squad. Another American, Alan Robert Nye of Whiting, Ind., was given a death sentence last year for plotting to kill Castro, hut the sentence was suspended and he was expelled from the country. The U. S. embassy appealed to Castro’s government Wednesday night for a stay of execution and clemency for Zarba, but this ap parently was ignored. Pleas Rejected A five-man military tribunal sentenced Zarba and seven of his Cuban invasion companions to death Wednesday night after con victing them of landing with a 27- man group on the northeast coast of Oriente province last week. A militatry appeals court quickly re jected defense attorneys’ appeals from the death penalty. The execution site for Zarba and his companions was a firing range in San Juan Valley, in the shadow of San Juan Hill where Theodore! Roosevelt and his Rough Ridersf made their historic charge. Another American, Richard Pe- coraro of Staten Island, N. 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