Page 9 The natural enemies of wood lands—fire, insects, disease— destroy more wood in an average year than is consumed by all of the country’s wood pulp mills. re schej head m will |*| '.m. dai!) mating 5 P.nu Jchedulij outh, th Is imjJ Hy '»id lead till re. Join, enera! are Rev. of Iff, n Bryai. I r. Rid :st Bap. 'unseliij director; F. Airs- , student ter Art. FORMER CORPS COMMANDER ORIENTS SENIORS lit. Paul Dresser, Corps Commander in 1963- service orientation lecture last week. Ca- 1 and now stationed at the John F. Kennedy dets, from left, are Nardie Vine, John Long, special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg, N. C., Lloyd Chester, John Van Alstyne, Oscar talks with Army seniors after delivering a Pena and Pat Gordon. and 4| rved bj Summer Program Slated For High School Seniors Stress analysis for 30 talented high school seniors will be in structed by the Department of Mechanical Engineering faculty this summer. The tightly-scheduled National Science Foundation program will provide a challenging experience for instructors, noted Dr. Clifford M. Simmang, department head. The six-week course begins June 6 and coincides with the first session of summer school. The 30 boys, who will have just completed their junior year of high school, will reside in A&M dormitories. They will be screen ed from 300 applicants from across the country. Classes six days a week will begin with simple concepts of stress, selected ip >rtions of cal culus, theory of elasticity and photoelasticity. The youths will study analog computers and pro gram their own problems in large digital computers. “Experience gained dramatical ly suggests the worthiness of ap plying features of the program in regular university classes,” ^immang remarked. New material from an hour lec ture at the beginning of each day will be exercised and worked out under faculty supervision. After a two-hour period of going over notes, solving problems and answering questions, students will take an exam over material pres ented that morning. No home assignment will be made on the material, which will stress complete student attention and participation in class. Four hours each afternoon five Bulletin Board THURSDAY Graduate Chemistry Wives Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Bank of Commerce. El Paso Hometown Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 2C of the Memorial Student Center. Deep East Texas Hometown Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Art Room of the MSC. San Antonio Hometown Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Social Room of the MSC. Chemical Engineering Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Brazos Valley Florist Shop. POWER YOUR PLAY ASHAWAY VANTAGE For Tournament Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis $9 dS/MWHK top-rated racket string ASHAWAY PRO-FECTED For Club Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis $7 Badminton $6 LASTS LONGER • STAYS LIVELIER MOISTURE IMMUNE ASHAWAY MULTI-PLY For Regular Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis $5 Badminton $4 SHAWAY PRODUCTS. INC., Ashaway. Rhode Island days a week will be devoted to laboratory work. Meanwhile, quiz zes will be graded and evaluated by program director Dr. George H. Thompson, and Simmang, as sociated director. Participants will work three hours a night in either the ana log computer laboratory of the Mechanical Engineering Depart ment or at the Data Processing Center. Classroom instruction will be handled primarily by Dr. John V. Perry. L. D. Trainer will teach digital computer programming and E. I. Bailey will instruct theory and use of the analog com puter. Last summer’s program show ed that a strict schedule may be maintained and an intensive pro gram of instruction given with considerable observed student stu dent growth, Simmang added. “The lecturer is challenged to present somewhat advanced ma terial to a quite uninformed audi ence in a very short time,” he said. Trips to the Antarctic are be coming old hat for chemical oceanographer Lela Jeffrey. Miss Jeffrey was one of three Texas A&M representatives who have completed a 60-day summer scientific cruie in the Scotia Sea, the body of water which separates South America from the contin ent. Icebergs and penguins were familiar sights to the 34 sci entists and 50 crewmen aboard the USNS Eltanin, a floating laboratory operated by the Mili tary Sea Transport Service for the National Science Foundation. The Antarctica cruise was the second within a year for Miss Jeffrey, a Teague native. She is in the midst of a two-year re search project concerning dis solved matter and lipids in sea water. That she was one of only two women aboard the ship caused Miss Jeffrey no concern. “It was really a very civilized group,” she chuckled. Her female colleague was Syl via Cerda, a scientist from the University of Chile in Santiago. Visits to three islands helped break the monotony of 12 to 15- hour work days. “We discovered an old shack on the island of South Thule,” she remarked. “It had some ruined food in it, so we filled it with sur vival food.” On another island — South Georgia — the scientists found a grave covered with large rocks. A crude cross fashioned from a broken harpoon marked the grave, but there was no nameplate. “South Georgia was a small is land covered with moss and salt grass,” Miss Jeffrey continued. “It was bare of trees.” She said the island stops allow ed a New Zealand researcher to snare new species of birds. “The last island was so heavily Other A&M personnel aboard the laboratory were Martin Ar- helger, a graduate student, and Antone Vos, a technician. Arhel- ger is on another cruise. Vos is working on a biological produc tivity study for Dr. S. Z. El-Say- ed, assistant professor of oceano graphy. “Weather was of the shirt sleeve variety much of the time,” Miss Jeffrey noted. “Sometimes it dipped to freezing. Wind gust- ed up to 35 knots. Waves rose only one to eight feet most of the time.” In her campus laboratory, Miss Jeffrey is analyzing samples of krill . . . shrimp-like animals which provides food for whales ... to determine food changes in the sea. When is it back to sea again for the researcher? “I don’t really know,” she smil ed. “Maybe next year.” Miiilc cArt Supply fidu've. f/uuMjft*- ■923 So. Cel lag* Ave - ,7 Scholarships Awarded By Manufacturing Firm Five winners of Moorman Man ufacturing Company Scholarships were honored recently at a ban quet in the Memorial Student Center. The event, sponsored by the firm, also was attended by eight A&M officials and professors. Representing Moorman were Dwight Graham of Troup, state sales manager; Jim W. Mitchell of Caldwell, district sales man ager, and John H. Reat of Lex ington, district sales manager. Scholarships winners were Hu bert E. Dornak of Wharton, ma joring in agricultural engineer ing; John W. Phillip of Boerne, agricultural education; Robert B. Strange of Fort Worth, agrono my; Sidney F. Weber of Marion, range science, and Orval D. Wal ker of Bryan, plant and soil sciences. A&M personnel were Dr. R. E. 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