Girl Watchers’ Corner ^ MARY LEE TREECE late t«Miss Treece, a 19-year-old nursing major, attends T.W.U.’s tudy Dallas Nursing Center. The Mesquite sophomore enjoys dancing and dating. She dates an Aggie fish. (Battalion _ Staff Photo) st 6 W Ag - Gem’ Sub j ect Of Short Course iool. group ppfo es to ibleius i wk: i the ly bei ringp: i lu® Members of the 16th annual [lliiwis Agricultural Aviation Conference nsorei and Pest Control Short Course iabon: here Tuesday got a look at a new it Ukconcept in aerial application of engit chemicals. are d They heard a talk and saw a ’sity i color movie on the Ag-Gem, a man and load carrying device rom ji which hovers just about the j.jj e p ground on a cushion of air. The craft is sometimes called an air cushion machine. It is strictly experimental and is not on the market. Ag-Gem, which stands for ag ricultural ground effect machine, was described by John Mercer of ; “ the Princeton University Aero- space and Mechanical Sciences b ® Department. He said the ma- tick chine roughly resembles a flying ? im saucer that never gets more than e«/i 2 feet off the ground. Usual “al- titude” is a foot or less as it kiffli) 1 skims over a field like an invert- ed bowl with hidden wheels, illfe: MERCER LISTED a variety of of ti* advantages of Ag-Gem. Some of Argon these included high safety corn ed ill pared to conventional aircraft, jes. economical payloads, operation in fortt small areas, and it flushes the hejjt pesticide down around the plant p 0r t where it does the most good. I ty; Compared to several other j gs j standard agricultural aircraft, ^ ^ the air cushion machine would cost less to buy, (estimated ini- ir tial cost of $9,000), is probably , f as economical to operate, and possibly qualified airplane pilots e nea would not be required. “A ground effect machine is artki; not necessarily easier to fly than ol is an airplane,” Mercer explained, ent’s “It is, however, much more diffi- ; of' cult to get into trouble than with direct an airplane. For this reason, an >r of operator is ready to go to work will after a few hours of dual instruc- niccption. This suggests that much v j 90 r lower salaried operators can be employed than those costs associ- fj] e d ated with airplane pilots.” ie dfP THESE FACTORS, he added, }) 111, should give Ag-Gem an insurance --^advantage. The disadvantages ? Ag-Gem has its share. In its present stage of develop- ,, ment, the machine can not be |f$ operated over tall crops like corn and cotton. Experiments so far have been with ground hugging plants such as cranberries and v potatoes, both of which survived the air turbulence very nicely, -r Mercer said. The device does best, he said over crops that form complete ground cover. Otherwise, if bare ground is exposed and dry, ter rific dust clouds are generated. Fertilizer spreading is one of the Civil Engineering To Hold Seminar On Wood Design A seminar on “Designing with Wood” for engineering students and practicing engineers will be held here Tuesday. The program, sponsored by the Civil Engineering Department and School of Architecture, will be from 2 to 4 p.m. in the archi tecture lecture room, according to Dr. Robert M. Holcomb, civil engineering professor. Prof. James Marsh will make archi tecture arrangements. Dr. Holcomb said the three- part program will be presented by representatives of the South ern Pine Association, Southern Pressure Treaters Association and American Institute of Timber Construction. “Physical properties of wood, pole and piling design considera tions, use of wood preservatives, fire-retardent treatment, prin ciples of glued, laminated lumber construction and systems of fast ening used in large laminated sections will be covered,” Hol comb added. Few Realize Work Needed To Cook Mess Hall Meals Thursday, March 2, 1967 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 5 machine’s brighter possibilities. THE AG-GEM is slow (speeds up to about 45 miles per hour) in covering a given amount of ground compared to airplanes, the speaker said. On the other hand, it saves a little time by not hav ing to travel beyond the field for turns and reloading. By BILL DINGER Battalion Special Writer Few students, other than wait ers, realize the tremendous job involved in putting just one meal before thousands of hungry Ag gies, a job the mess halls perform three times a day, every day, nine months a year. One person realizes this'^hercu- lean task perhaps more than other. He is Henry Wellnitz, food manager for Duncan Mess Hall. Until just recently, Food Serv ice personnel worked what could be called a split shift. Under this system, they worked preparing a meal or cleaning up for the next only when a meal was being served. They would then lay off for a few hours, then come back to work during the next meal. Wellnitz explained how this has been changed. “EVER SINCE Duncan began serving Aggies, its help has worked in a split shift. Cleaners and cooks would have to take a break between meals,” he noted. “As of Monday, however, clean ers and cooks are on an eight- hour, staggered shift. The first shift punches in at 5 in the morn ing. They’ll get everything ready for the breakfast meal, prepare the meal, and clean up after the meal. They stay until 2 in the afternoon.” Something looks wrong here. Five to two? That sounds like nine hours. Wellnitz explained the extra hour as being two half- hour periods given the mess hall help to eat the two meals a day provided for them. During this hour they receive no pay. AT 10 A.M., while this shift is but halfway through its working day, another shift punches the time clock and begins its working day. “This group, along with the first group,” Wellnitz went on, “prepares the noon meal, and then gets ready for the evening meal. This group is also finished in nine hours. “I think this new time system will create better morale in the workers, as well as stimulating more interest in the personnel for their work,” he prophesied. AS TO WHAT type of prepa ration went into the fixing of an ordinary meal, Wellnitz described a typical day. “Preparation time differs, of course, with the type of food being prepared,” he said. “First, the mess hall is divided into three basic sections: a meat section, a vegetable section, and a pantry section which prepares all salads and beverages. “Each section head makes a list of everything his department will need for the day, and turns this in to Mr. (Oscar C.) Plantt, the head chef. Everything is ordered in cases, cans, etc. Plantt then orders all this from the storehouse, which is located in Duncan’s basement.” THE BASEMENT storehouse of which Wellnitz spoke of has a separate staff, and fills only the orders of chief cook Plantt. The basement storehouse underneath Duncan mess hall covers about as much space as i fo OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! 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Cases and cases of everything from pineapple slices to emergency chili (it takes less of the stu dents’ board fees for the cooks to make it in Duncan) are stacked in row after row as high as eight or nine feet, throughout the base ment. Due simply to a lack of space on the ground floor, the Duncan butcher shop is also located in the basement, directly underneath the kitchen area. “WHEN THE needed supplies arrive up in the kitchen, each section takes what it ordered. “Meat and pastry supplies,” Wellnitz added, “must be ordered a full day in advance, though. The central pastry shop here in Duncan, besides providing enough delectables for the corps, also supplies pastries for Sbisa Dining Hall and some for the Memorial Student Center. “We try to keep the amount of time from cooking to serving as small as possible,” Wellnitz in terjected. “In preparing a meal, dishes are cooked on a fairly rigid schedule, so that everything will be ready at the same time. WHENEVER possible,” he add ed, “preparations for the next day’s morning meal are made during the evening meal, to ease the work the following morning.” It’s interesting to note that Duncan buys nothing pre-made, except for canned preparations and fresh bread. All pastries, doughnuts, cakes, pies, every thing in this line, are prepared in the central pastry shop. The closest thing to ready-made pas tries used are cake mixes. “Using cake mixes,” Wellnitz added, “makes mixing easier and also insures more accurate mix ing.” EVERY ONCE in a while, a groan of hunger rises from the Corps when the waiters return to their tables to say that they can’t bring the “bull neck” back for a third or fourth time. Well nitz explained why a dish is cut off so abruptly in such a case. “Every recipe we follow is broken down into batches to serve 100 people,” he explained. “This is true with meat, canned foods, vegetables, etc. We use institu tional recipes. The chef is re sponsible for estimating how many batches to make.” In this way, if three or four waiters went back for additional refills after the last batch had been dished out, they would nec essarily have to go back empty- handed as the cooks cannot make another batch for 100 when at the most, 20 or 30 would get served. “WE HAVE approximately 90 employees in an entire day.” “Un der the new split-shift system, however, there would be some thing like 28 people working in the kitchen proper and cleaning up in the dining area at one time. This number is exclusive of butchers, pantry workers, store room workers, etc.” The only problem that Wellnitz went into in detail was the prob lem of waste. He attributed this waste to the necessary flaws in serving food family style in part, and to careless waste of food by Aggies. “There is quite a tremendous amount of food waste,” he said. “Most of the edible food not used by the students but prepared by the kitchen is used to feed the mess hall help. When students make food inedible, they are only hurting themselves. “ON WEEKENDS, the only thing we can do is to estimate how much to make, by taking into account the events taking place on campus at the time, and by go ing over past years’ precedents.” TWO PERSONS that Wellnitz praised very highly for their ex cellent work are B. B. Suehs, Duncan’s supervisor, and chief cook Plantt. “SUEHS PUTS his estimate of attendance up on the mess hall bulletin board, and the mess hall operates accordingly,” Wellnitz emphasized. “He and Mr. Plantt coordinate closely.” IF MORE Aggies knew how planning and preparation went into those meals that they rant and rave about at times, maybe some day instead of “Beat the hell out of the mess hall,” visitors would hear an honest wildcat for the mess hall cooks. MYSTERY STUDENT IN A BLACK BAG Oregon State University’s class in Speech 113—Basic Persuasion, has at each session a mystery student covered by a black bag with only his bare fee showing. (AP Wire- photo) — Job Calls — Greenhut Revises Economics Book Dr. M. L. Greenhut, head of the Economics Department, has re vised his textbook for the Uni versity of North Carolina Press. “Plant Location in Theory and in Practice” was originally pub lished in 1956. WEDNESDAY Federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Houston — AG ECO (BS), AG ED (BS), FIN (BBA), MGMT (BBA). Gulf Oil Corporation, Depts. in U. S. Operations — ACCTG (B, M), MGMT (B, M), MATH (B, M), I ENG (B, M). Gulf Oil Corporation, Explora tions and Producting — GEOL E (B, M, D), GEOPHYS (B, M, D); also summer employment. Gulf Oil Corporation, Warren Petroleum Corp. — ChE (B), I ENG (B), ME (BO, PET E (B, M); also summer employment. Gulf Oil Corporation, Produc tion — ChE (B), CE (B), EE (B), GEOL E (B), ME (B), PET E (B, M); also summer employ ment. Gulf Oil Corporation, Refining Department — ChE (B, M), ME (B, M) . Gulf Oil Corporation, Chemicals Department — ChE (B, M), ME (B, M); also for summer employ ment. Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Com pany — ARCH (B), ChE (B), CHEM (B, M), CE (B), EE (B), ME (B), PHYS (B, M). Price Waterhouse & Company — ACCTG (B, M). Republic National Bank of Dal las — ACCTG (B, M), FIN (B, M). United Aircraft Research Lab oratory — AERO E B, M, D), EE (B, M, D), ChE (M, D), CHEM B, M. D), PHYS (B, M, D), MATH (B, M, D), ME (B, M, D). WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY Arthur Anderson & Company — ACCT (B, M), I ENG (B, M), 'MGMT (B, M), MATH (B, M). THURSDAY Freeport Sulphur Company — ChE (B, M), ME (B, M), PET E (B, M). Schlumberger Well Services — CE (B), EE (B), ME (B), PET E (B), PHYS (B). Southern Pacific Company — CE, EE, I ENG, ME, (B, M, D). Southwestern Life Insurance Company — ACCTG, MGMT (B BA, MBA), AG ECO (B, M). U. S. Army Corps of Engineers — Fort Worth District — CE, EE, ME (BS); also for summer em ployment. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers — Galveston District — CE, EE, ME (BS); also for summer em ployment. CASA CHAPULTEPEC BIG 4 DAY SALE—THURS., FRL, SAT., & SUN. Fiesta Dinner Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale and Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Dessert. R *T,r $1,09 TACO DINNER Two Beef Tacos, One Chili Con Queso, Guacamole Salad, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Dessert. Regular $1.25 99c OPEN 11:00 A. M. CLOSE 10:00 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE PHONE 822-9872 jfepajir human hearts or drinking water... 811|ji iiil! 8 mm HHB and anything else that you might think of. The 165-year history of Du Pont is a history of its people’s ideas — ideas evolved, focused, and engineered into new processes, products and plants. The future will be the same. It all depends upon you. You’re an individual from the first day. There is no formal training period. You enter professional work immediately. Your personal development is stimulated by real problems and by opportunities to continue your academic studies under a tuition refund program. You’ll be in a small group, where individual contributions are swiftly recognized and rewarded. We promote from within. You will do significant work, in an exciting technical environment, with the best men in their fields, and with every necessary facility. Sign up today for an interview with the Du Pont recruiter. Or mail the coupon for more information about career opportunities. These opportunities lie both in technical fields—Ch.E., M.E., E.E., I.E., Chemistry, Physics and related disciplines — and in Business Administration, Accounting and associated functions. E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.) Nemours Building 2500—1 Wilmington, Delaware 19898 Please send me the Du Pont Magazine along with the other magazines I have checked below. □ Chemical Engineers at Du Pont □ Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont □ Engineers at Du Pont □ Du Pont and the College Graduate Name Class Major JDegree expected. College My address. City JState _Zip Code *M.u.». WkT-Oft