THE BATTALION Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, February 4, 1965 Consolidated Now Offering Computer Science Course A few years ago junior and sen ior high school students were slav ing to master the slide rule so they could solve math assignments at a quicker rate. Now they are working just as hard, learning Fortran language and the basic steps needed, to feed their problems into giant com puters which will solve the equa tions within seconds. This spring, 15 junior and sen ior students at A&M Consolidated High School in College Station have enrolled for a course in basic computer science. This is the first time a course of this type has been G. Rollie White... (Continued from page 1) Stock Yards Loan Co., of Kansas City and the National Finance Credit Corp. White recalled that one of his greatest honors came a number of years ago when the Brady Cham ber of Commerce bestowed upon him the “Outstanding Citizen’s Award.” And in 1956 he was presented a 50-year pin by the Brady Masonic Lodge. White recalled years ago that he “literally crawled into the Brady country in 1876,” since he wasn’t quite a year old when he came from Lockhart with his late parents, W. B. and Laura Thomp son White, to McCulloch County by covered wagon. His father was a Missourian who rode to Texas horseback after the Civil War. His mother was a native of Lockhart. White himself was born on the Plum Creek Ranch near Lubbock Aug. 22, 1875. Radio Committee Cited By Council The Amateur Radio Committee has received commendation from the Memorial Student Center Coun cil for meritorious service. The council cited the committee for its constant public service to the A&M student body, faculty members and the community, and for operating during emergencies, such as the Alaskan earthquake and the Wichita Falls tornado. A resolution by the council went on to congratulate the committee for receiving the American Radio Relay League Communication De partment’s Public Service Award. Summer Program Receives $2,500 A $25,000 grant has been re ceived by the Texas Transportation Institute to defray costs and pro vide scholarships for a six-week summer graduate program in As phalt Paving Technology and Con struction. The announcement was made by Bob M. Gallaway, director of the study program. Eighteen scholarships of $1000 each will be awarded to college teachers from Canada and the South and Southwest United States selected for the program. Lec turers in addition to Gallaway will include Fred J. Benson, dean of the College of Engineering; Dr. R. A. Jimenez and Dr. Ralph N. Trazler, Texas Transportation In stitute staff members, and Charles R. Foster, executive director of the Bituminous Concrete Association. Supplementary lectures will be provided by six specialists of in ternational reputation who willj each conduct a seminar during the six-week period. The summer program will be held June 7-July 16. offered to high school students in this area although college and graduate students have been stu dying it for years. George W. Burcham, mathema tics and physics instructor at Con solidated, will teach the course. The 12 boys and three girls en rolled in computer science will spend five hours weekly until school recesses learning the For tran language and programming their problems so they can be solved on the computer. Burcham received his instruction in computer science at A&M. He said his students will have access to the university Data Processing Center for one hour per week in which they will use card punch equipment to write their programs. The other four hours each week will be spent working in class rooms. Junior and seniors students at tending the high school who have completed at least a half-year of advanced math were allowed to enroll in the computer course. “The course is designed to pro vide an inductive approach to learn ing and to help students establish order and organization to their work,” Burcham said. Livestock Team Wins Second Spot In Meat Judging The Junior Meats Judging Team won second place in the South western Exposition and Fat Stock Show at Fort Worth this week. Eight teams representing major agricultural colleges and universi ties competed in the meats contest. Oklahoma State University took first and Kansas State University was third. Aggie team members are Gordon Sauer of Doss, Lester Osbourn of Valley Springs, Dexter Sagebiel of Llano, Stanley Miller of Lexington and Findley Brewster of Temple. Team coach is Dr. Zerle Carpenter of the Animal Science Department. Sauer was second high point individual in the overall contest and was presented a Hereford as sociation beef trophy special award. Fifth place high point honors went tQ*.Osbourn and 12th to Sagebiel. Sauer and Osbourn were high point individuals in lamb judging and beef grading. The team was first in beef grading. Research Grant Awarded To fTTI The Texas Transportation In stitute has received, a grant for $4,200 from Aluminum Company of America and the Texas Power and Light Company for continua tion of a study of possible uses of Rockdale slag aggregate and fly ash. Contact men for the project will be R. H. Breckenridge, research analyst, Texas Power and Light Company, and R. D. Hornbeck, chief metallurgist for Alcoa. The research this year will involve hot- mix, cold laid designs of pavement mixtures. The research also will be concerned with roofing granules for shingles on a problem involving separation of elongated from rounded particles. More than $50,000 has now been received to date for the slag and fly ash research. The project, now in its 10th year, is conducted through the A&M Re search Foundation. °f Security ..for Cd-oddeae m en The Top Combination of Protection and Security For Complete Information Call BILL F. CATES 3801 College Road VI 6-4986 You Owe It To Yourself! American General LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Houston * Texas Gus S. Wortham — Chairman Benjamin N. Woodson, CLU, President COMPUTER EXPLAINED . . A&M Consolidated students receive briefing. Noted Scholar To Speak At Renaissance Conference we i Plans for the 14th annual South-Central Renaissance Confer ence to be held here March 26-27 with an internationally - known scholar as a speaker have been an nounced by Assistant Professor T. J. Mattern, conference director. Featured as a banquet speaker will be the Rev. Walter J. Ong, S. J., an internationally - known scholar on medieval and Renais sance civilization as well as modem culture. Dr. Ong is professor of English at St. Louis University. The South-Central Conference in earlier years has attracted several hundred humanities scholars of the Renaissance period. The region in clude Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Louisiana. Professors from various colleges and universities will present lec tures during the two-day confer ence. Dr. Ong will speak March 26 on “Commonplaces, Typography, and the Transformation of Renais sance Culture.” The Jesuit professor has studied in almost every European nation as well as several universities in the United States. He has written numerous articles and books, the most recent being “The Barbarian Within.” This is a collection on such diverse topics as medieval hymnody and educa tional television. The book has been widely acclaimed as readable and learned. Its central theme is the uniqueness of the human personality and man’s need for in- terpensonal involvement. One reviewer said that Dr. Ong was “for all his fantastic learn ing . . . tough-minded but likable, and dicidely optimistic.” He is more hopeful about the technologi cal revolution than many modem Christian thinkers, the reviewer al| so said. Dr. Ong will speak at a bandl in the Ramada Inn, where the delti gates will meet for lectures til day Friday. The conference nil continue Saturday morning in tljl Architecture Building Auditorium. [ Working with Mattern in lot arrangements are several ofe| faculty members. They are Stanley Archer, registration; Lotisl Hauer, exhibits; C. K. Esten, i tertainment; Dr. A. L. Bennettl catering; Dr. Peter A. Ford, fadl lities and tours; Terry Long, puHl city, and Dr. Melvin Rotsch, and programs. Favorite Ukranian foods aii| borsch, fruit soups, holuH (cabbage leaves stuffed with meatl rice and buckwheat grits) ttif nalysnyky (cheese or fruit-filli dessert crepes). 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