The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 11, 1966, Image 4

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    Mess Halls Buy All, Pay Less
How can the Food Services De
partment afford the services it
gives, on the board fees paid by
students ?
Can the Department mooch off
the University?
“We don’t get a thing free
from the University,” noted Joe
Marek, food purchaser for the
Department.
“We get most of our milk
products from the A&M Cream
ery, and fresh eggs from the
Poultry Science Plant, but we pay
regular prices for these items.
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Those facilities must meet their
expenses,” he added.
“The buying of non-perishable
foods usually takes place during
the summer months, when we are
not as busy as we are now. Then,
we take competitive bids.”
The Department screens all
suppliers submitting bids, to get
the most and the best for the
students’ money.
According to Marek each bid
der is asked to submit two cans
of his produce with each bid. We
then open the cans to find the
cost per ounce.
“Certain goods are canned in
syrup,” he continued. “The syrup
is drained, and the goods washed
in warm water before being in
spected. In this way, a higher
priced brand may be bought, if
it is found to be cheaper per
ounce, and a cheaper brand, if its
quality is better.
“We want quality first, and
price second,” Marek added. “We
have enlarged our list of sup
pliers, and try to deal directly
with the packer or manufacturer,
if possible. If not, we go through
a jobber.”
Buying non-perishables by the
carload, Marek is able to get low
er prices for them.
“Fresh meats are bought on a
weekly basis. A very small por
tion of the meat bought, is pur
chased from the University.
Fresh fruits and vegetables are
bought on a similar basis, in 60
to 90 day cycles.”
“Many leafy greens, when
bought frozen, are cheaper and
of higher quality. The only prob
lem in this area is the limited
freezer space available,” said
Marek.
The Department utilizes no
other funds than those paid in
board fees.
“We make money some days—
lose money others, but it all
breaks even. “That we get mon
ey from the state is also a mis
conception,” he added. “Actually,
we get none. Even money for
construction and change of facili
ties comes from students’ board
fees.”
Wmm
CAPT. ERIC SMART
Ag Research Vital
Conference
On Humanities
Utilize “Brain”
Milton Huggett, co - director,
Center for Computer Research in
the Humanities at Texas A&M,
announced a nationwide confer
ence on Computer Research in
the Humanities Nov. 17-18 at the
Ramada Inn in College Station.
The conference will open with
a welcome by A&M President
Earl Rudder. The keynote ad
dress will be given by Dr. Vinton
Dearing of the University of
California. His topic will be
“Speculations on the Humanistic
Potential of Computers.” A pan
el discussion on “Opportunities
and Responsibilities of Com
puters in Humanistic Research”
will follow.
The panel will consist of Rev.
John W. Ellison of El Paso,
chairman, Dearing, Donald H.
Freeman professor of govern
ment at the University of Ari
zona, Dr. Claude Hall, professor
of history at Texas A&M, and
Robert L. Smith director Data
Processing Center, Texas A&M.
M. M. Kessler, associate direc
tor of Libraries, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, will
speak on information retrieval
by computer. He will be followed
by O. R. Holsti, Associate pro
fessor of political science, Stan
ford University.
Nov. 18, Joseph Raben, assist
ant professor of English at the
University of New Mexico, will
speak on stylistic analysis by
computer.
Allen Forte, associate profes
sor of the theory of music at
Yale University, will address the
conference following Raben.
The final speaker will be Floyd
Horowitz, assistant professor of
English.
exclusively
FOR COLLEGE MEN
For Information Call 846-8228
To State Progress
The associate director of the
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station outlined here Friday how
research is vital to the good
health and progress of the state’s
agriculture and how it is a blue
chip investment for taxpayers.
Dr. H. O. Kunkel, speaking at
the final session of the three-day
annual Experiment Station Con
ference at Texas A&M University,
said tax expenditures for research
are small compared to investment
returns to city dwellers as well as
rural citizens.
About 500 persons attended the
meetings to hear talks and dis
cussions centering on the theme
“Opportunities for Progress in
Texas Agriculture.”
He said modern poultry and
livestock production methods, uni
form and full-headed rows of
grain sorghum, better cotton
plants, the near absence of the
screwworm fly, machine harvest-
adapted tomatoes and weed-free
crops all stem from scientific
tests.
Specific examples cited by the
Experiment Station official were
the almost $200 million larger
grain sorghum production in Tex
as than that of a decade ago,
and a $20 to $25 million increase
in the rice crop value over that of
five years ago.
But effectiveness of research
programs is being challenged, he
cautioned.
Agriculture, Kunkel pointed out,
is trending toward urbanization.
About 40 percent of rural Texas
land is now owned by urbanites,
and this is becoming the picture
that agricultural research must
serve.
The speaker suggested that re
search “packages” be developed
toward critical need areas. And
such packages should be more
people-oriented.
“We need more attention to the
total social aspect of land rather
than just the agricultural aspect,”
Kunkel said.
Dr. Bardin Nelson of the A&M
Agricultural Economics and Socio
logy Department said rural citi
zens are getting away from acti
vities that have been restricted
mostly to family, neighborhood
and community.
SPEED READ IN
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— .rSpeec/ Reading
SCHOOLS COAST-TO-COASTi
Army Medal
Conferred For
Korean Effort
The Army Commendation Medal
was conferred recently on Capt.
Eric E. Smart at Texas A&M
University for post engineer work
in Korea.
The green and white medal was
pinned by the A&M commandant,
Col. D. L. Baker.
Captain Smart, 30, was installa
tion maintenance advisor in the
Korean Logistical Base Command
at Pusan two years. His rec
ommendations and advise in use
of buildings and utilities result
ing in savings to Korean and
U. S. Armies were cited.
A Cool Springs, N. C. high
school graduate, the officer is
studying for a masters degree in
mechanical engineering at A&M.
Smart did undergraduate work at
North Carolina State where he
was commissioned. He served
with the First Amored Division
at Fort Hood, Texas, before go
ing to Korea. He has been in the
Army five years.
Captain Smart, his wife Patri
cia and their seven-year-old son
Terry reside at 3901 Laura Lane
in Bryan.
LeHIGH, Neb. Off) — It’s again
st the law to sell doughnut holes
here, according to Dunkin’ Do
nuts of America.
THE BATTALION
Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 11,1,
★ FREE *
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Hamburger after purchasing one Hamburger.
Good Only Oct. 11 - 12 - 13th
Good Only 8 p. m. to 12 p. m.
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Get One Char-Broiled Hamburger
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Background Music
Dutch Treat
A&M
East Gate
Highway 6
George
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Bernard
Shaw
be darned!
Youth isn’t wasted on the young. And the young don’t
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Our top people are never old-fashioned about any new
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shelled out $465 million in capital expenditures
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Thinking young explains how we chalked-up one of the
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5 fold in 10 years. How we now have 100 plants in the
U.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, Africa and Asia.
Possibly we could afford to relax a little. But success
makes young blood run even faster.
Which means that the ambitious college grad couldn’t
find a more provocative opportunity anywhere else in
American industry.
Th<
thi:
des
the
cop
901
Accountants, Chemists, ChEs, MEs, Physicists, MBAs
Our representative will be on your campus soon.
Contact your placement director to make an interview
appointment. Or write for a brochure outlining more
specific areas of job opportunity to Mr. J. B. Kuhn,
Manager of University Recruitment, Celanese
Corporation, 522 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10036.
&
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