THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, September 28, 1967 Confal leaders at- University’s and Country 'ct. 12-13 will ssed. e Rev. C. of the Cross Christ LIFT FOR FLOOD VICTIM I. S. Coast Guardsman lifts Mexican girl into Coast Guard Ifelicopter as she and 16 others are rescued from farm near [atamores, Mexico. Flooding Rio Grande river threatened in heir home. (AP Wirephoto) rference put- Rev. Freuii- Texas Rural jar in 195S. 10 protestani > recent 12tl Boy Scouts ark in Idaho, i economist- is A&M, sai sters and la; d to atteni a meetings at sponsored by ral Extension s Agricultur- on, and con- Department onomics ani Plans e Man jst difficult ?le to figure rogram, ani 't out of the the Colorado creation ant i Departmet )ffice Of Continuing Education overs Wide Area Of Courses One of the busiest offices on impus serves adults and youths ho are not seeking college cred- .. s, 11 The Office of Continuing Edu- ition helps sponsor line up con- erences for groups of far-rang- ig size — from seven for an rc-welding seminar to more than for an annual 4-H Round- Popularity of continuing edu- ation has grown through the ears, Upwards to 71) confer- nces now attract as many as persons annually. These pres do not include more than conferences conducted off ampus for as many as h.OOO per ms. Earliest records show A&M osted 21 short courses in 1939 ith 6,939 persons attending. But lore than half that number at- raded a single get-together, the ox, speaking k Recreatioc te, said itisj 1 the humar ioison Safety To Be Subject lit Weed Study our natural hould not ha category, th( 1. “He is the tor to handle ram.” : the recrea- hilosophy to id day of the ucted by the d Parks De- Terence is to ers and tech- accelerated ition knowl- tills. Enroll- persons, he group not com the basic which is re- ecreation ad- in ideal posi- d about the a, he ernpha- ortant in the ;an vear Trttts ncnb wear ; YOU? ntage ow. James W. Hammond, industrial Fgiene director for Humble Oil nd Refining Company, Houston, ill address an industrial weed ontrol conference here Oct. 23-2-1. Hammond’s topic, “Herbicides afety and Toxicology,” was an- ounced by Dr. Wayne G. Mc- lully, associate professor of ange science at A&M. A registered professional engi- eer, Hammond is a past presi- ent of the Gulf Coast Section of American Industrial Hygiene Issociation. He is a member of Air Pollution Control Associa- ion, American Water Works As- ttiation and a former mayor of Fast University Place. HAMMOND ‘ HAS a master’s agree from Mississippi State diversity. He also is a diplo- »ate of the American Academy iEnvironmental Engineer's. Dr. McCully said the confer ee will emphasize practical as- tets of industrial weed control, anels are scheduled for selective eed control, soil sterilization and giiatic weeds and drainage itches. Another featured speaker will *Dr. F. Leonard Timmons, weeds ivestigation leader in aquatic ad noncrop areas for the Agri- iltural Research Service, USDA, lant Science Division, University [Wyoming. He will discuss the issibility of pollution of water ith applied herbicides. REPRESENTATIVES of chem- al companies and formulators ill describe industrial weed con- ol products. Displays of prod- its and equipment will be ex ited throughout the conference. Texas Farmers Short Course, a forerunner of today’s 4-H Round up. PRIOR TO that time a number of short courses were staged, many of them no longer in exist ence. The Ice Manufacturers As sociation is one of the sessions which went the way of the wild goose. Meetings today vary from the Texas Tennis School to supervis ory courses, justices of the peace seminars and air pollution control workshops. Actually, the Office of Contin uing Education is only four years old, having been established in 1963 to fill a need cited by A&M’s Century Study of 1962. That study called for a quality con- inuing education program which offers a service to a community or an individual to give convinc ing evidence of A&M’s partner ship in the welfare of Texans. Philosophy of the program is to encourage meetings of educa tional and professional societies at Aggieland. A BOON to regional meetings at A&M has been the installation of air-conditioning in dormitories, says Bill Hensel, coordinator of continuing education facilities. But air-conditioned dormitories also have helped push summer school enrollment up, creating a scheduling problem. Hensel hires part-time help to aid conferences with registration, receipts, typing of name tags and selling luncheon tickets. ‘Our aim,” Hensel pointed out, “is to relieve the sponsor of the details and mechanics of a con ference, allowing him to give full concentration to the program.” “The hair-pulling time comes when you try to estimate how many people will attend a meal,” he added. “And weather is al ways a factor. Expected enroll ment dwindles on the day a hur ricane is predicted to hit the Tex as Coast. Ice storms put crimps in conference plans.” AMONG THE oldest confer ences staged at A&M are the Texas Water and Sewage Works Association course, which held its 49th annual meeting this year, and the Highway Engineers Short Course which recently met for the 40th time. Ninety per cent of all confer ences booked by the Office of Continuing Education are staged in A&M’s Memorial Student Cen ter. It has 64 hotel rooms and can house a maximum of 150 if rollaway beds are pressed into service. “Dealing with all sorts of peo ple is the most interesting part of this job,” Hensel commented. “We have all sorts of emergen cies arise such as the need for projectors or sound equipment, but these problems are usually quickly solved by our personnel.” A&M Scientists Don’t Fit p ™ b . le , ms i ook . Generally-Accepted Image The picture of the lonely scien tist clutching a test tube in an obscure garret should be retired to the album. It was never very accurate, anyway. The new view in research is the “interdisciplinary” approach. It’s the teaming-up of scientists from different fields of study to solve a particular problem. This approach is becoming more evident at universities throughout the United States, including Tex as A&M, where it’s being used on problems ranging from space cap sules to statistics. “Exhaustive studies have been made on what the federal govern ment gets for its research dollar and they show it gets relatively little from individuals,” says Har ry Whitmore, director of Texas A&M’s Space Technology Divi sion which is heavily engaged in interdisciplinary projects. SOMEWHERE between the concepts of “two heads are better than one” and “too many cooks spoil the soup,” lies the payoff. The Manhattan Project, the team effort which built the first atomic bomb, is one example. “Oddly,” says Whitmore, “most universities are incapable of tak ing on these jobs because they aren’t structured to do it.” In many cases—and this was once true at A&M—one scientific subject may be under research at a number of places on a cam pus with little communication among the separate researchers. “Although it may jump tradi tional boundaries within universi ties, the process of unifying re search is mandatory today,” says Whitmore. ONE EXAMPLE of interdisci plinary unification at A&M is work on “Project Themis,” a pro gram funded by the Department of Defense to discover better ways of design and management of processes and projects. “Optimi- BA Conference Begins Oct. 22 A management seminar spon sored by the School of Business Administration is set here Oct. 22-28, announced W. E. Eckles, executive development programs director. Eckles said the seminar is ex pected to attract approximately 30 executives from throughout the Southwest. Guest speakers include William Oncken Jr., president, William Oncken Associates, New York City; Edward J. Green, president, Planning Dynamics Inc., Pitts burgh, Ja.; J. W. Miller, vice president, Employers Casualty Insurance Company, Dallas; and L. D. Collins, operations vice president, Central Power and Light Company, Corpus Christi. Other speakers are Dr. Robert J. Potts, regional medical direc tor, Mobil Oil company, Dallas; D. B. Campbell, former manager, Plastics Department, Sabine Riv er Works, DuPont Inc., Orange; and Dr. J. P. Abbott, distin guished professor of English, Texas A&M. Among topics are goal-oriented management, communications, or ganization, planning, decentrali zation and performance evalua tion, decision making and estab lishment of effective controls. Knebel, Holcomb Attend Seminar Dr. Earl Knebel and John Hol comb of the Agricultural Educa tion Department are in Chicago this week attending the National Seminar on Vocational-Technical Teacher Education. The session will explore fresh approaches in the education of vocational-technical teachers who will be preparing students for new and changing occupations. Knebel said seminar partici pants will analyze results of re cent research, experimental pro grams, and new developments in teacher education. Did You Know These Facts About Checks? 1. They are your best record of any monetary transaction. 2. Checks drawn on local banks are more readily cashed. 3. University National Bank is within walking- distance of the campus. zation” is the work and both theoretical and “practical” disci plines are involved. Another part of “Project Themis” is a program of subjective weather forecast ing for localized areas and here meteorologists team with statisti cians and computer technologists to arrive at the answers. If “optimization” sounds a little stuffy, consider a case in point where a research team picked an existing design of the tail of a well known airplane, reworked it using the figures for some new materials, and came up with a design which showed it could be made stronger or lighter. NOT ONLY in the physical sci ences does the interdisciplinary team approach seem to work well, but it appears the biological sci ences are headed toward some form of unification. This year, Texas A&M estab lished a new Institute of Life Sciences which aims to bring to gether the various splintered dis ciplines of biology. The institute’s director, Dr. J. van Overbeek, declares: “Modern biology differs a great deal from the old biology, which was frag mented. Now, through molecular and cell biology, all disciplines come together.” For instance, hormones in both plants and animals are being studied side by side with the old distinctions between zoologist and botanist fading. In one sense, the history of sci ence shows that few great dis coveries were truly individual. Einstein used the physical obser vations of Michelson and some of the mathematics of Lorenz in his theories. “You can’t take 15 professors and say ‘Go do research’,” notes Whitmore. It requires the serv ices of a person who may not be a specialist in any of the par ticular fields but who knows enough about each to act as a catalyst, or mediator to keep the effort from being splintered in 15 different directions. Whitmore says it all adds up to this: It is probable that more knowledge has been gained in the past decade than in all the ages past. In the succeeding decades, the important discoveries are like ly to be made by multi-specialist groups. A basic problems book prepar ed by Texas A&M’s Engineering Graphics Department has been published by the Addison Wesley Company of Reading, Mass. Contributors include James H. Earle, Samuel H. Cleland, John P. Oliver, Lawrence E. Stark, Paul M. Mason, North B. Bardell and Michael P. Guerard. Dr. Earle, associate professor in charge of engineering graph ics, said the content is structed t o serve as an introductory course in the general field of en gineering. He noted emphasis is placed on utilization of graphics as a vital part of the creative process rather than merely as a communication medium. Read Battalion Classifieds BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterans and Cortventional Loans FARM & HOME SAYINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 CASA CHAPULTEPEC 4 DAY SALE THURS., FRL, SAT., SUN. Fiesta Dinner Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Three Enchiladas, Beans, Rice, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Candy. Regular d*! 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