Page 8 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 28, 1967 THE BATTALION Environmental Laboratory Becomes A Reality A night - shrouded highway slashed by passing motorists’ headlights unreels before a driv er’s eyes. Suddenly, fog swirls over the scene. The driver’s hands clench the steering wheel as posts, guard rails, trees and approaching car lights become indistinct blobs. Leg muscles tense, eyes squint and heart beats faster as the driver strains to orient on the middle stripe and discern objects ahead. Meanwhile, students at instru ments outside the environmental lab record the “driver’s” pulse rate, temperature, respiration and other physical factors while sub jecting him to various situations. The human factors and envi ronmental lab being installed in Texas A&M’s Industrial Engi neering Department will test per sons in various environmental conditions, such as an executive forced to make an urgent, sig nificant decision. The facility, designed and con structed by students and faculty, is for work in a human factors engineering graduate program being added by the department, according to Dr. A. W. Wortham, head. He said the lab will be used in instructing large classes, indi vidual experiments by Ph.D. candidates and faculty research. A product of interdisciplinary thinking, the lab is being built under the supervision of Dr. R. L. Street. Instructors Jim Hen- nigan and Peter Anderson and graduate students Paul Hale of Hitchcock, Steve Newcomer of Austin and Frank Bergen of Chil- licothe turned numerous ideas into hardware for the lab. 120 Fellowships To Be Awarded Texas A&M University stu dents with questions about Dan- forth Graduate Fellowships may contact Dr. Haskell M. Monroe, assistant dean of the Graduate College. Monroe said candidates must be nominated by liaison officers of their undergraduate institu tions by Nov. 1. He noted the foundation will award about 120 fellowships in March. Open to seniors or recent gradu ates of accredited colleges in the United States, Danforth Fellow ships are designed for students who have a serious interest in college teaching as a career and who plan to study for a Ph.D. Monroe said Danforth Graduate Fellows are eligible for four years of financial assistance, with a maximum annual living stipend of $2,400 for single persons and $2,950 for married, plus tuition and fees. Dependency allowances also are available. Applicants must be less than 30 years old and may not have undertaken graduate or profes sional study beyond the bacca laureate. The foundation does not accept direct applications, Dr. Monroe noted. A 7 by 7-ft. rear-projection screen was sand-blasted by the work crew to meet specifications. Temperature, humidity, sound and visual conditions in the 8 by 12-ft. chamber will be completely controlled from a central con sole. A 30-to-140-degree tem perature range will be possible with five tons of air-conditioning. Heaters, a humidifier and elec trostatic air cleaner further mod ify conditions. A dual speaker system will en able researchers to surround test subjects with sound or introduce conflicting noises. Light intensity will be rheo- statically controlled and the rear- projection system will introduce optical illusions. A 5%-ft. square BATTALION CLASSIFIED One day WANT AD RATES per word ional da arge—50<* Disp’ e d 34 per word each additional day Minimum charge—5 Classified Display 904 P er column inch each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication FOR SALE Have your figure salon at home. Stauffer reducing machine at home. 476t2 Washer-Dryer combination. Excellent condition. 822-3731. 476tfn CHILD CARE FOR RENT HELP WANTED Chilu care all asres. 846-8151. 341tfn Quiet room, outside door, air conditioned, adjoining bath shared with one. Call early or late, 822-6888. 476tfn Aggie wanted. Three meals free daily for short work shift. Call Mgr. 846-9929. Dutch Kettle. 476t4 Gregory’s Day Nursery—846-4005. 218tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3406 South College, State Licensed. 123-8626. Virginia D. Jones. R. N. 99tfn Lovely Austin Stone House. Central air and heat, family room, dishwasher, 2Vi! tile bath, large landscaped lot. 415 Col lege Main. $175. 846-5444. 472t5 Servicemen wanted for T. V., radio and hi-fidelity repair. Call Bryan Radio and T. V. 822-4862. 475tfn AGGIE WIVES Nursery attendants needed for Sunday church worship hour. First Methodist Church in Bryan. Call Mrs. Knapp 822- 1324, $1.40 per hour. 475t6 SPECIAL NOTICE 10’ x 68’ Mobile home. 3 beds, completely furnished. Perfect for 3 students located in country on C-Bar W Ranch about 20 minutes from C.S. Home set in grove of big trees. No next door neighbors. 3 Coin operated electric typewriters avail able for use in Memorial Student Center. Volkswagen 11,400 miles, radio, rain is, parcel tray, tires. Call 846-4148. shields les, radio, r P. O. windows, W/S/W 475t4 pick-up. V-6 Iwb 4 sp Excellent mechanical condition. Call 1 3547 after 5:00. 846- 475t4 Two Gentle Mares, gc beginners. Call 822-3980. ood for kids and you home freezer. Best in town. Frank Smith 822-1317. 469tfn The Washington Senators were shut out 20 times last year. LUEDECKE ROCK SHOP Findings, Stones & Equipment Jones Bridge Road Next to West Runway Easterwood Airpoi;t — 846-7474 aiocti Located practice rooms on lower Check out key at main desk. Room B of sound proof piano MSC. nd pro level i WANTED Fur- Room mate to share nished Apt. Two blocks from campus. Call after 5:00 and ask for Bill. 846-4513. 476tl OFFICIAL NOTICE of Student Pu Official notices must arrive in the Office ' Student Publications before deadline of l p. m. of the day preceding publication. ing privileges. $112.50 per utilities paid. Phone 822-4972. month. All 470tfn Two furnished two bedroom brick apart ments, central air and heat, private patio. ments, central air and heat, private patio, two blocks from campus. Available Feb- iary 1st. Can be reserved now with a lall deposit. 823-8181. 466tfn STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day the University, 846- and weekly rate, near 5410. 262tfn THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Nissan, Edward Degree: Ph.D. in Statistics Dissertation: Estimaaion of Linear and Non-Linear Production Functions Under Restraints Time: Monday, October 2, 1967 at 8:00 lace: tisti Conference Room Institute cs O. E. Teague Research C Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies OTIS MCDONALD’S Typewriters • Adding Machines • Cal culate Norelco dictating equipment ading Machines • tors • Cash Registers • Electro static Dry Copiers Sales • Service • Rentals dictatir 429 South Main Street • Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas 77802 FREIGHT SALVAGE Brand Name Furniture Household Appliances Bedding Office Furniture Plumbing Fixtures All damaged items I utility by our repai stored to full s department. C & D SALVAGE CO. 32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan Watch Repair Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5810 WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA Price Increase Oct. 1 Order Now Save $17.50 James O. Freeman, Dist Mgr. Use Our Christmas Lay-A-Way Plan. Phone 846-6626 Before 9 a. m. & After 5 p. m. GM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker 822-1336 822-1307 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes - TV - Repaired 713 S. Main 822-1941 It is now time for all Corps Accounts, Civilian Government Organizations Dep art- mental and Professional Clubs, Hometown and Interna tional Clubs, Honor Societies, M.S.C. Advised Accounts, Sports Clubs, Student Body Governing Organizations, and Service Or ganizations, to be officially rec ognized at the Student Finance Center, MSC. Each club must file a list of their officers with the Student Finance Center. DEADLINE OCTOBER 16. ANNOUNCING A COMPLETE —SERVICE— Hanson Meats 822-1316 or 822-1317 Custom Slaughtering Freezer Meats — Sides, Hinds, Fores Cuts — Any Amount — Financing Available — Butcher Depart ment — Food Lockers — Portion Control — Home Freezers — Sausage and Smoked Products. WE’RE GLAD TO MEAT YOU HANSONS 2701 Texas Ave. EAT BETTER FOR LESS FAIRWAY APARTMENTS Two bedrooms Furnished or unfurnished Carpeted and draped T.V. cable connections Close to A&M. elementary schools and golf course Cen 4 ral air and heat Built in stove, refrigerator and disposal. From $99.50 3300 S. College Resident Mgr. Apt. 3-B 846-4713 822-8022 THE BRYAN ARMS APARTMENTS “Congenial Living” Separate Adult & Family Areas "Children Welcome’’ Model Apts. Open For Inspection From $120 - All Utilities Paid 1602 S. College Avenue Resident Manager - Apt. 65 Phone 823-4250 Make Your Deposit Now VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Brya A&M University STUDENTS!! Need A Summer Home & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 SUPPORT THE AGGIES Get Your ROUND TRIP TICKETS to LSU GAME for $15.00 at CARROLL’S CORNER North Gate Make Reservations Before Friday Noon. For Information Call 846-3663 Enco, Amalie, Conoco 31c qt. We stock all local major brands. Where low oil prices originate. Quantity Rights Reserved Wheel Bearings 50% Off Parts Wholesale Too Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel 10,000 Parts - We Fit 96% of All Cars - Save 25 - 40% Brake Shoes $2.98 ex. 2 Wheels — many cars Auto trans. oil 25$ AC - Champion - Autolite plugs Starters - Generators All 6 Volt — $10.95 Each Most 12 Volt — $11.95 Each Tires—Low price every day — Just check our price with any other of equal quality. Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 21 years in Bryan per hour. pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 465tfn WORK WANTED f£ 1 mother. Fenced play area. Near Univer sity. Call 846-2675. 475t3 FOR SALE OR LEASE Photocopy machine. Coin or 1 ated. Negative or positive copies. 846-3496 after 5 p. m. oper- argain. 470tf n For BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It’ Cade Motor Co, Ford Dealer ARE YOU WASHING YOUR DIRTY LINENS IN PUBLIC WANTED 50 PEOPLE TO USE THE HOOVER SPIN-DRY WASHER FREE - FREE - FREE No Obligation Home Demonstration (Rent - Lease - Purchase) Call: G. H. (Moe) Hair 822-1719 For An Appointment platform within the chamber can be tilted at various angles, vi brated or replaced with a turn table or treadmill. A one-way mirror provides ob servation capability. Ports in the modular-constructed, soundproof vault will accommodate cameras for movies, video tapes and closed-circuit TV transmission to classrooms. Console instrumentation also will include a 24-channel record er and physiological data acqui sition system. Provision will be made to tie into A&M’s new IBM 360/65 computer. The entire chamber can be dis mantled and reassembled in bolt ed panel sections. Russian Students Find JFK Popular John F. Kennedy ranks first on the list of Americans most popu lar with Russian university stu dents, a special poll revealed to day. Results of the poll, conducted this summer among 1,000 univer sity students by the Soviet No- vosti Press Agency, were pub lished in a report appearing in the current issue of Look maga zine. The Gallup organization conducted a similar poll among 500 U. S. college students. Both polls, taken for the maga zines special issue on Russia, show that American and Soviet students know surprisingly little about each others countries. The Russian students ranked author Ernest Hemingway as their next most popular Ameri can, with Mark Twain, Franklin D. Roosevelt, William Faulkner and Louis Armstrong following in that order. Also, there were a few votes for singers Paul Robeson and Pete Seeger and some for actor Gregory Peck. When asked to name America’s greatest political leaders, Soviet students listed Abraham Lincoln first, JFK second and FDR third. The poll among Russian stu dents indicated that most of them learn about the United States through the translated works of American authors. More than any other book they could name, the Soviet collegians listed John Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley as giving the most comprehensive view of America. The 500 American students polled by Gallup ranked Russia’s cosmonauts as the Soviets they most admire; then came Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin, Lenin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and Vladi- mar, Nabokov, the author of Lo lita (who left Russian in 1919). Listing their most admired Russian political leaders, U. S. students picked Kosygin number one by a wide margin, this per haps because he is currently in office. A trickle of votes turned up for Soviet Communist Party chief Leonid Brezhnev and for Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. On the subject of peace, 76 percent of the American stu dents were sure the superpowers could live in peace with one an other. This reassuring optimism spread to 90 percent of the Rus sian students. Soviet students listed Judge ment at Nuremburg, On the Beach and the old version of War and Peace as their favorite mov ies. Some 87 percent of the Amer icans polled had seen no Soviet- made movies at all, and the few who had named Ballad of a Sol dier as the best they’d seen. Con Thien, Where Big Shells Rain Down On Tired Marines By EDWIN Q. WHITE CON THIEN, Vietnam. OS’)— The name Con Thien may not be recorded in Marine history beside Guadalcanal or Iwo Jima, but those who are here will remember these muddy hills as a place where bravery was routine and heroism was commonplace. CON THIEN is a forward posi tion for a detachment of U. S. Marines hanging on grimly in the face of the greatest artillery, rocket and mortar siege seen in Vietnam since the French were overwhelmed 13 years ago at Dien Bien Phu. The big shells come from the North, but the enemy is all around. Con Thien is an artillery base and an observation post. It is the high ground two miles south of the demilitarized zone that divides Vietnam. The top most hill rises about 500 feet and observers can look across the DMZ into North Vietnam. The hills are scarred and scraped by shell blasts. Red mud covers everything. Con Thien is many other things. IT IS teen-aged warriors in filthy, tattered fatigues digging their holes deeper in the brief interval between barrages. They joke as they dig. Sometimes they laugh. FRESHMAN PICTURE SCHEDULE FOR 1968 AGGIELAND CORPS FRESHMEN: Corps freshmen will have their Yearbook Portrait Schedule: portraits made for the Aggie- land ’68 according to this sched ule at University Studio at North Gate in class “A” winter uniforms. Fish should bring poplin shirts, black ties, and bri gade or wing shields. , Thosd freshmen who paid for their yearbook picture at regis tration should bring their FEE SLIP. Those who did not, may pay their $1.50 at the University Studio. Sept. Oct. 25 & 26 — A-l & B-l 26 & 27 — C-l & D-l 27 & 28 — E-l & F-l 28 & 29 — G-l & H-l 2 & 3 — A-2 & B-2 3 & 4 — C-2 & D-2 4 & 5 — E-2 & F-2 5 & 6 — G-2 & H-2 6 & 9 — Maroon Band 9 & 10 — White Band 10 & 11 — Sq. 1 & 2 11 & 12 — 12 & 13 — 13 & 16 — 16 & 17 — 17 & 18 — 18 & 19 — 3 & 4 5 & 6 7 & 8 9 & 10 11 & 12 13 & 14 Civilian Freshmen: and Co-Eds: Sept. Oct. 25 thru 29 — A-D 2 thru 6 — E-M 9 thru 13 — N-S 16 thru 20 — T-Z and Make-ups Con Thien is all these things on three muddy mounds of earth facing North Vietnam. The Ma rines moved in last April because it is a “commanding piece of terrain, the important piece in the area,” as officers express it. Almost immediately the position came under enemy guns. In the spring and early summer, the shellings were heavy. Then the intensity dropped. MORE MARINES moved into positions flanking Con Thien. More gunpits were set up 2,000 yards to the south. The artillery at Dong Ha, Cam Lo and Gio Linh, the other corners of “Leath erneck Square,” and the big guns at Camp Carroll, farther west, supported Con Thien. B52 bomb ers and tactical air strikes pound ed the enemy day after day. A month ago the North Viet namese again began to show they were still there with heavy guns in the treelines, ridges and moun tains. The pounding of Con Thien was stepped up. There is no pattern to the siege. Sometimes it is quiet for an hour, two hours, three hours. Then there is the shout: “Incoming.” MEN RACE for bunkers, holes and ditches. There were plans to build an all-weather road that would link Con Thien with points to the south, and truck in supplies, troops and equipment. The road has not been completed. A big culvert was blown up by the enemy. Truckloads of rock-fill sink into the mire. Almost everything coming into Con Thien must move by heli copters. When one begins to descend, troopers on the ground head for their holes, knowing a barrage can be expected. WHEN THE decision was made to control Con Thien it was not believed the enemy could mount and maintain such an offensive. It was believed his guns could be spotted and wiped out. This has not happened, but a commitment was made. To pull back would give the enemy a propaganda victory. It would go counter to Marine thinking. C. J. FREUDENBERG Seguin Reverend To Discuss Scouts At Church Confal) I. S. Coas (Iffic »vei Ministers and lay leaders at tending Texas A&M University) 22nd annual Town and Country Church Conference Oct. 12-13 will hear Scouting discussed. The speaker is the Rev. C, J, [elicopter Freudenberg, pastor of the Cross latamore; United Church of Christ in heir homi Seguin. Kenneth Wolf, conference pii licity chairman, said Rev. Freud- enberg was chosen Texas Rural Minister of the Year in 195S, He served as one of 10 protestani chaplains during the recent 12tl World Jamboree of Boy Scouts at Farragut State Park in Idaho, Wolf, Extension economist- agribusiness at Texas A&M, sail ^ more than 150 ministers and la; leaders are expected to attend the non-denomination meetings at the university. The conference is sponsored by the Texas Agricultural Extension Service and the Texas Agricultur al Experiment Station, and con ducted by the A&M Department of Agricultural Economics and Sociology. One of tl ampus sen ho are not The Offic ition helps rrences for ig size — rc-welding for ai Recreation Plans To Include Man Man is the most difficult natural resource angle to figurt in any recreation program, and he should not be left out of the picture, the head of the Colorado State Universtiy Recreation and Watershed Resources DepartmeU said here. Dr. Arthur Wilcox, speaking during the two-week Recreation Management Institute, said it is j a mistake to ignore the human factor. “Man is part of our natural resources, and he should not be put into a separate category, the department head said. “He is the most complicated factor to handle in a recreation program.” Such was some of the recrea tion management philosophy to come out of the second day of the institute. It is conducted by the A&M Recreation and Parks De partment. Popularity ation has ears, Up nces now 0,000 persi igures do r confere ampus for MS. Earliest osted 21 s fith 6,939 p lore than ended a sii flit of the Purpose of the conference is to ^ AmericE give recretion managers and tech nical specialists an accelerated up-dating of recreation knowl edge, concepts and skills. Enroll- miation an mentis limited to 30 persons. Wilcox cautioned the group not to get too far away from the bask (?ree fro: concept of recreation which is re creation. Park and recreation ad ministrators “are in an ideal posi tion to be concerned about the total problems of leisure.” The speaker put resources into three large classes in relation to recreation. They were scenic', scientific or natural history, his torical sites, museums, etc.; and strategic, which are areas stra tegically located to care for masses of people. The strategic class, he empha sized, is the most important in the long run. Other speakers at the morning session were Lemuel Garrison, regional director of the National Park Service at Philadelphia, Penn.; and Robert Sharp of Den ver, Colo., assistant regional di rector of the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation. 0180 ■ FoBi James W. ygiene din id Refinin ill address mtrol confi Hammond afety and ounced by lolly, as ttge scienc A registe: ear, Hamn Issociation. he Air Poll ion, Amerh lest Unive hammop diversity, 'ate of th iEnvironn Dr. McCi ace will er tets of in< 'anels are : : eed contro inatic we< itches. Another . tDr.F.Le lv estigatio ad noncrop dtural Res iant Scienc iWyoming assibility < ilh applie Represi compa: 'll describe "l produci Rs and e feted thro Puritan Sportwear at Wf 3un ^tonics ° men's wear REGISTRATION AND TEXT BOOKS BREAK YOU? Then see us, for a personal loan. Take advantage of our prompt, confidential loan service now. UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia (North Gate) College Station, Texas Telephone: 846-8319