1 Thursday, January 28, 1965 College Station, Texas I ! READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS AGGIES There Is No Question . . . about where to get the most for your used books Lou is not only willing to buy your books -but will pay more f ol . them because he needs your friendship. If it’s a good trade for You - it’s a good trade for Lou. Get the most for the least at LOUPOT'S “Where Aggies Trade” THE BATTALION Page 11 Navy Diver Enrolls Here Will Study Ocean, ‘Frontier Of Future 9 An internationally renown ex plorer of the ocean depths en rolled for graduate work in oceanography this week at A&M. He is Lt. Commander Donald Walsh, who joined Jacques Pic card of Switzerland in recording the deepest ocean dive in history in 1960. They went down seven miles in the batyscaph Trieste to the ocean floor of the Mari anas Trench, 200 miles south west of Guam in the Pacific Ocean. For his part in the record- shattering dive, Commander Wel sh received the Legion of Merit from the President of the United States and numerous other awards from various organiza tions, including recognition as one of the 10 outstanding young men in the nation in 1960 by the Junior Chamber of Com merce. Commander Walsh, although on full time duty with the Navy, will be on scholarship for his work toward a masters degree in oceanography. His aim is to gain the academic background to allow him to advance in the oceanographic field. “The people in the oceanogra phy department have really giv-. en me a break, and I am grate ful for the opportunity to apply myself,” Commander Walsh com mented. “I looked over the of ferings of several schools and decided A&M has the best gen eral background in Abe country for all around training in ocean ography.” A graduate of the U. S. Naval Acadmey, Walsh has 11 years of service in the Navy, but says he has always been a sailor. Asked if he planned to get his doctorate at A&M, Walsh com mented, “That would be pre sumption s of me to say. Right now, I don’t know whether I can do the graduate work. I’ll tell you this. I’m really going to try.” “Inner space is the frontier of the future, even more than outer space, although there’s no com parison now,” he said. “The Navy is trying to make the ocean transparent, but is just on the threshold of solving the problem. We are thinking now in thousands of yards, when the problem is thousands of miles. I want to be one of the pioneeds of innerspace explora tion.” Commander Walsh’s exploits with the “Trieste” have been written and illustrated in Life magazine. Reader’s Digest, the National Geographic and other publications. He has traveled thousands of miles and made hundreds of talks about the dive and the future of oceanography. “There’s not enough training of oceanographic scientists. Where else can man go to pio neer but the ocean,” he explain ed. “I’m not knocking aero space, but man is ready to leap into the cosmos although 71 per cent of our planet is virtually un known.” “The Soviets have the largest oceanographic program in the world, but the U. S. is taking steps to achieve parody and superiority. In times of cold war tension of powerful submar ine force could strangle world trade, and 98.2 per cent of world trade is by ships. We have to defend against a surprise missle attack from beneath the sea. And we have to prepare a de fense of the sea lanes of com merce,” he continued. Commander Walsh plans to continue “telling the gospel” for the Navy and in behalf of ocean ographic progress. He is sche duled to speak at the Smithson ian Institute Feb. 17 on “The U. S. and the Oceans.” The 33-year old officer has a varied background. A native of Berkeley, Calif., he won a com petitive appointment to the Nav al Academy in 1950. He served two years aboard a cargo ship after graduation before joining the submarine service. In 1959 he was made officer in carge of Bathyscaph Trieste, a post he held for three and one-half years. Commander Walsh lacks only his thesis for a masters degree in political science from San Diego State College. He plans to complete that work in addition to a self-study course toward a gen eral law education. Hobbies are numerous for Walsh. Photography, sailing, scuba diving and travel are ma jor interests. His wife, Joan, plans to do work at A&M toward a degree in zoology. “I’s one of the few things Don doesn’t know a lot about,” she confided. She, too, is a photo graphy bug, likes to travel, and plans to take instruction in scuba diving here. The Walshs live at 405 Fair way in Bryan. TRADES NAVY CAP FOR COWBOY HAT . . . veteran oceanographer enrolls. I didn't think Charlie was that kind of guy... He's always been sort of a, well, you know what. Yes, I know. 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