The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 22, 1966, Image 3

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THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 22, 1966
Journalist Named jjsc speaker’s
SCONA Speaker By Guerillas
Sound Off —
EArLce- uc&C.L
“Your ride leaves early! After thinking for a week, is that
the best excuse you can think of for leavin’ early?”
Computers Never
Replace Quests
Computers can’t take man’s
place in scholarly quests.
“The machine performs only as
instructed and programming does
not turn the operation over to
the computer,” Dr. Joseph Raben
of Queens College, City Univer
sity of New York, informed a
Conference on Computers in
Humanistic Research at Texas
A&M Friday.
“Because of a computer’s qual
ities, it can become an assistant
in various researches in which we
are interested,” the English pro
fessor commented. “It can be
asked to do numbing, repetitive
tasks in short periods of time it
would take a scholar thousands
of hours to do.”
He said the speed, flexibility
and storage magnitude of the
computer make it an ideal re
search tool for the humanist, who
often becomes bogged down and
loses interest while studying vast
manuscripts for stylistic differ
ences.
“What is needed is to com
bine bursts of energy from man’s
mind with the plodding, untiring
persistence of the computer,”
Raben said.
The conference continued in its
final day with speakers on struc
tural analysis, storing and pub
lishing computer research and a
symposium on programming lan
guages and techniques.
Raben reviewed the conference
in its last session Friday after
noon.
Beat t.u.
Richard Wilson, a Pulitzer
Prize winner in journalism for
distinguished reporting of na
tional affairs, has been named
roundup speaker for the 12th
Student Conference on National
Affairs at Texas A&M Univer
sity.
Wilson, chief of the Cowles
Publications’ Washington Bu
reau, speaks at 1:30 p.m. Satur
day, Dec. 10, giving a summation
of the conference in the closing
session.
SCONA XII, with more than
150 delegates from 60 universi
ties and colleges throughout the
nation and several foreign coun
tries, is scheduled Dec. 7-10 at
A&M’s Memorial Student Center.
This year’s SCONA topic is
“Europe and the United States:
Challenges of Nationalism and
Cooperation.”
Wilson’s nationally syndicated
column appears in the Dallas
Morning News, the Washington
Star and other large newspapers
throughout the country. He has
covered every national political
convention and presidential cam
paign since 1932. He was a war
correspondent in the European
and African theaters in World
War II.
A former president of the Na
tional Press Club, Wilson • is
chairman of the Gridiron Foun
dation, a charitable and educa
tional trust for the aid of news
men and their families.
Wilson is an honorary doctor
of letters of Iowa Wesleyan Col-
Professor Awarded
$37,000 Grant
Dr. Ronald Darby, assistant
professor of engineering sciences
at Texas A&M University, has
been awarded a $37,000 National
Science Foundation grant.
The award will support a two-
year study, “The Kinetics of Por
ous Electrodes,” which involves
transport mechanisms in fuel
cells.
Announcement of the grant
was made by A&M President
Earl Rudder.
Beat t.u.
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion
are those of the student writers only. The
Battalion is a non tax-supported non
profit, self-supporting educational enter
prise edited and operated by students as
a university and community newspaper.
The Associated Frees is entitled exclusively to the use for
republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous
origin published herein. Rights of republicatlon of all othr-
matter herein are also reserved. _
nd-Class postage paid
Seconei
at College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be made ny
or 846-4910 or at the editorial office, Rooi
For advertising or delivery call 846-6416.
by telephonln
4. YMC
ng 846-6618
A Building.
Members of the Student Publications Board
chai
Arts; John D. Cochrane, Co
McD
Linds
.irman ; Dr.
Cochr
it Publications Board are: Jim
ivid Bowers, College of Liberal
>llege of Geosciences; Dr. Frank
Rodenberger,
:e of Vet-
Agricul-
yeai
sale
Mail subscriptions are J3.60
$6.60 per full year. All
tax. Advertising rate furnished on request.
The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas
per semester; $6 per school
subscriptions subject to 2%
•nished on request. Address:
2%
*
ture.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M is
published in College Station, Texas daily except Saturday,
Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, September through
May, and once a week during summer school.
MEMBER
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
Francisco.
Publisher Texas A&M University
Student Editor Winston Green Jr.
Managing Editor John Fuller
Staff Writers Patricia Hill, Mike Plake,
Robert Borders, Jerry Grisham
Head Sports Writer Gary Sherer
Staff Photographer Russell Autrey
A
Ik
a i
A WEALTH OF OPPORTUNITY
FOR ENGINEERS & SCIENTISTS
AT MARTIN COMPANY IN FLORIDA!
Move up to an exciting career and the
Florida way of life with Martin Company
in Orlando, Florida. Immediate openings
for graduates with BS, MS, and PhD
degrees in:
■ Electronics ■ Mathematics
■ Aeronautical ■ Mechanical
■ Engineering Mechanics ■ Physics
INTERVIEWS
ON CAMPUS
NOVEMBER 29 & 30
Interviewer: DAN SQUIRES
.1 m
M0V (fp
WITH MARTIN
ORLANDO FLORIDA
An Equal Opportunity*Employer (M&F}
lege and an honorary doctor of
laws of Drake University. A
native of Newton, Iowa, he maj
ored in chemical engineering at
Iowa State College and in jour
nalism at the State University of
Iowa.
The speaker went to work for
the Des Moines Register in June,
1926, and has been with the
Cowles organization since as a
reporter, city editor and Wash
ington correspondent. He has
written more than 100 articles
for Look Magazine in addition to
his three-times-a-week column.
Other awards garnered by Wil
son include the distinguished
service award for Washington
correspondence by Sigma Delta
Chi, professional journalism fra
ternity, the Headliners Club
award of magazine news presen
tation, and the Raymond Clapper
Memorial citation for “brilliant
and repeatedly exclusive report
ing.”
Beat t.u.
Robert E. Moran, scheduled
to appear April 27 on Texas
A&M’s World Around Us series,
has been killed in Guatemala.
Reports Monday indicated that
Moran, who was filming alone in
the jungles of Guatemala near the
Honduras border, was murdered
by guerillas aligned with Com
munist rebels. The reports hinted
that two men were paid $3 to
shoot Moran in the back.
Richard Adams, chairman of
the MSC World Around Us series,
said he received a letter from
Moran’s agent two weeks ago ex
plaining that Moran was missing.
Death of the much-traveled Salt
Lake City resident was announced
Sunday.
Adams said an associate of
Moran’s, Jack Currey, will show
Moran’s films of the Dominican
Republic and supplementary foot
age at the April 27 presentation.
Editor,
The Battalion,
Dear Editor:-
If a newspaper’s excellence or
success were based on the adver
tising space it fills, The Battalion
would surely capture the sweep-
stakes in any contest.
Really, now. Don’t you think
your advertising space is a bit
overbearing when 79% of your
editorial page is allocated to ad
vertising? (Referring to tU
November 17 issue.)
In that same issue there wen
only 17 stories spread among tkt i
eight-page edition. W
Agreed, advertising is yout
bread and butter. But let’s sem
a little meat, too.
Sincerely
Patricia Pritchett
547 Bryant St.
Bryan, Texas 1
Profs Represent A&M In Houston
Seven professors will represent Jernigan, H. S. Creswell and Ro.
Texas A&M at a National Coun
cil of Teachers of English meet
ing in Houston Nov. 24-26.
English Department head Dr.
Lee J- Martin heads the group
to attend the Thanksgiving week
end meeting. Also attending will
be Professors H. E. Hierth, E. E.
Stokes Jr., Harry Kroitor, J. S.
bert Archer.
The convention will focus at
tention on composition and litei.|
ature teaching problems in m
ondary schools, colleges and
versities.
Beat t.u.
Ichthyology Class Notches
Record With Prize Catch
A fresh water ichthyology class
at Texas A&M University has
notched a new record by catch
ing the first species of mountain
mullet in Texas inland waters.
The Agonostonus monticola was
landed in a recent field trip by
50 junior wildlife science majors
and three staff members. Stu
dents made the catch from Long
King Creek near Goodrich in
Polk County.
Collections were made in the
upper, middle and lower Trinity
River and its tributaries.
Dr. Richard J. Baldauf, Wild
life Science Department acting
head, said the catch of a moun
tain mullet is not new to one of
the staff members on the trip,
Dr. Kirk Strawn. In 1946, Strawn
was credited with catching the
first species on the North Amer
ican Continent.
Baldauf said mountain mullet
are common in Mexico and the
Caribbean. The fish grows to
about one foot in length, he said,
and apparently spawns in the
ocean and migrates to fresh
water streams.
Two rare minnows also were
collected for the first time from
the Trinity by the A&M students.
Beat t.u.
Photography by Brady
Price Schedule
OUR PRICES ARE ON A CAMERA CHARGE, PLUS
PRINT BASIS, WHICH ENABLES OUR CUSTOMERS
TO BUY ONLY THE PHOTOGRAPHS NEEDED.
THE CAMERA CHARGE WILL BE
50< for each 3..X..5 proof
1.00 for each 5..x~7 proof
Portraits
THE FOLLOWING PORTRAITS MAY BE FINISHED
IN BLACK AND WHITE OR BROWNTONE
1
6
12
2M. x 3%
Billfold
1.00
2.00
3.00
3^ x 5
Portrait
1.00
3.00
5.00
5x7
Portrait
1.50
7.00
10.00
8 x 10
Portrait
2.50
12.00
20.00
11 x 14
Portrait
5.00 each
16 x 20
Portrait
15.00 each
20 x 24
Portrait
25.00 each
For Oil Coloring Add
8 x 10 and smaller $2.00 each
x 14 3.50 each
16 x 20 5.00 each
20 x x24 7.50 each
$1.00 additional for each face in groups
B&B STUDIO
Hearne — LI 6-2141
5? On Camps
J f J)m, O JD/n/l*/ T? MlY) fl
with
MaxQhulman
(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
“Dobie Gillis” etc.)
“M” IS FOR THE MANY THINGS
YOU’LL TEACH HER
Nobody will dispute—surely not I—that raising children
is a task which requires full time and awesome skills.
Nonetheless, a recent nationwide survey has revealed a
startling fact: mothers who go back to work after their
children are safely through the early years are notably
happier, better adjusted, and more fulfilled than mothers
who simply remain housewives. Moreover—and mark this
well—the children of such working mothers are themselves
happier, better adjusted, and more fulfilled!
All very well, you say, but what’s it got to do with you?
Isn't it obvious? If you are underachieving at college, get
your mother a job.
What kind of job? Well sir, your mother is probably
between 35 and 50 years of age, so certain occupations
must immediately be ruled out. Logging, for example. Or
whaling. Or carhopping.
But don’t despair. There are other kinds of jobs-not
many, to be sure, but some. However, you must not stick
Mom in just any old job. You must remember that after
the excitement of raising you, she would be bored to tears
as a file clerk, for instance, or as a dolman. (A dolman, as
we all know, is someone who brings handfuls of water to
track layers. With the recent invention of the pail, dolmen
are gradually falling into technological unemployment.)
But I digress. I was saying, find Mom a job worthy of
her talents, something challenging that uses her vast wis
dom and experience but, at the same time, is not too hard
on her obsolescing tissues. That’s what Walter Sigafoos
did, and the results were brilliantly successful.
Walter, a sophomore at the Upper Maryland College of
Wickerwork and Belles Lettres, majoring in raffia, ap
proached the problem scientifically. First he asked himself
what his mother did best. Well sir. what she did best was
to keep hollering, “Dress warm, Walter!”
At first glance this seemed a skill not widely in demand,
but Walter was not discouraged. He sent out hundreds of
inquiries and today, I am pleased to report, his mother is
happily employed as wardrobe mistress for the Montreal
Canadiens.
Another fortunate venture was that of Frank C. Grans-
mire, a junior at the Oregon State Conservatory of Music
and Optometry, majoring in sties. Frank, like Walter, did
a survey in depth of his mother’s talents. Chief among
them, he found, was her ability to make a roast of beef
feed the whole family for three days. So, naturally, Frank
got her a job at the Museum of Natural History.
What has one to do with the other, you ask? Isn’t it
obvious? Anyone who can stretch ribs like that belongs in
paleontology.
I cannot conclude this column without saying a few
words about Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades. The
reason I cannot is that this column is sponsored by the
makers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, and
they are inclined to get peckish if I omit to mention their
product.
Not, mind you, that it is a chore for me to plug
Personna. Or, for the matter of that, to shave with
Personna. No sir: no chore. Personna takes the pain out
of shaving, scraps the scrape, negates the nick, repudiates
the rasp, peels the pull, boycotts the burn, blackballs the
bite, ousts the ouch. Furthermore, Personna endures and
abides, gives you luxury shave after luxury shave, day
after day after day. And further furthermore, Personna
is available both in double-edge style and Injector style.
And as if all this were not bounty enough, Personna is
now offering you a chance to grab a fistful of $100 bills!
Stop at your Personna dealer and get an entry blank for
the new Personna Super Stainless Steel Sweepstakes. But
hurry! Time is limited.
* * * © 1966, Max Shulman
The makers of Personna who bring you this column all
through the school year also bring you the ultimate in
luxury shaving with Personna and Personnels partner
in shaving comfort—Burma Shave, regular or menthol.
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulz
SHE'S 60\H6 TO DO VOUR SCIENCE
PROJECT WITH SOME OTHER KIDS...
THAT MEANS VOO'LL SETA FAILIN6
6RADE AND LOSE YOl/f? BAD6E..
YOU'LL BE OFF THE SAFETY PATROL...
I DON'T KNOW WHAT ELSE CAN
HAPPEN TO YOU, CHARLIE BR0WM.
I DO....THE ANTS 60T
INTO MY LUNCH!
V
PEANUTS
ALL RlSHT, LET'S
60! HURRY IT UP,
OVER THERE!
LET'S 60!
AS SOON AS OUR TEACHER FINDS I
DIDNT DO A SCIENCE PROJECT,SHE'LL
6IVE ME A FAILIN6 GRADE, ANDTHEN
THEY'LL TAKE ME OFF SAFETY &TR0L..
THIS IS THE FIRST TIME iVE
EVER REALLY FELT LIKE I COAS
SOMEBODY..I LIKE D0IN6THIS...I
DON'T WANT TO LOSE MY BADSE..I..
. . ;