Che Battali College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 12, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 ATrticks Still Needed Bonfire Work ■Trucks are still needed for irk on the 1969 Bonfire, accord- |g to head yell leader Sam nrn. “All the trucks we have now ve come from outside sources,” >rn said, “construction compa- js and the like. fin order to reach our goal 105 feet, we must have more bcks,” the Houston senior con tinued. “I think the students are doing a terrible job this year on helping get set up for Bonfire. It’s theirs, and they need to work on it.” Chuck Holliman, Torn said, or himself “or anybody” should be contacted “as long as we get trucks.” The first sign of A&M’s 1969 bonfire—the centerpole—will erected Monday. Construction of the gigantic Thanksgiving Day football game bonfire during the following nine days will follow a work schedule approved by A&GYT President Earl Rudder. Undergraduate students will be permitted to work only during Nov. 22-24, the weekend and As Possible ‘Death Ray’ A&M Prof, Student Find New Use for Microwaves An A&M professor and one of i students may have concocted forerunner of the proverbial eath ray.” They hope, however, their proj- will have beneficial medical [plications. he study involves radiation h microwaves modulated by electrocardiogram (ECG) sig- 1 of the subject, a rat in the st series of tests. Dr. A. J. Giarola, electrical gineering professor heading the oject, emphasized the current >rk is very preliminary. He is ng assisted by Glen D. Ant ler, senior from Longview. ‘We simply wanted to see what t! effect an ECG-modulated micro- wave would have on a live sub ject,” Giarola explained. They found that a low-powered (22.4 milliwatts) microwave beamed on the chest of a rat in creased its heartbeat about two percent. “If we can speed up or slow down the heart,” Dr. Giarola ob served, “it would have definite medical applications.” Although the professor now knows that microwaves can affect the heart, he still doesn’t know how. He hopes subsequent experi ments will provide the answer. Giarola said a similar test was conducted in Pennsylvania with hemist To Speak Here In Stress as Death Cause .m, ) Prof. Henry Eyring, renowned emical scientist known for re- ;ing and applying scientific ■inciples to the problems of everyday life, will speak Thurs- ly at A&M on “Death From Aging, Cancer, Poisons and Other Stresses.” The 7:30 p.m. lecture in the lemistry Building auditorium is open to the general public as well s A&M faculty, staff and stu- mts, announced Dr. A. E. artell. The Chemistry Department lead noted Professor Eyring is 'siting A&M this week as an :ademic consultant to the depart- ent’s development project. Eyring, distinguished professor chemistry and metallurgy at ie University of Utah, also will [present a 3 p.m. technical lecture riday on “Thermodynamic and ransport Properties of Liquids nd Gasses.” It will be given in oom 231 of the Chemistry Build- g- The professor has an outstand- ig international reputation for is research, attested by 450 pub- cations and seven books. His hief interests are statistical thermodynamics, applications of quantum mechanics to chemistry, theory of rates of chemical re actions and theory of fluid be havior. A 1923 graduate of the Uni versity of Arizona, Eyring re ceived his master’s there the fol lowing year and the Ph.D. from the Universtiy of California at Berkeley in 1927. He served on Wisconsin, Cali fornia (Berkeley) and Princeton University faculties 18 years and moved to Salt Lake City in 1946. At Utah he was chemistry pro fessor, department chairman and Graduate College dean until be coming distinguished professor this year. Among numerous Eyring scien tific and professional group mem berships are the National Acad emy of Sciences, American Philo sophical Society and scientific advisory board of the Robert A. Welch Foundation. The former American Chemical Society presi dent also has headed the Ameri can Association for the Advance ment of Science and served on the NSF national board. the exposed heart of a frog. There also was an unconfirmed report in a national scientific magazine that a monkey was killed recently during a microwave experiment. The A&M experiment differed drastically from the frog test in that the rat’s heart had not been removed from the body, but rather was completely shielded by skin, muscle and bones. Anesthetized for the experi ment, the rat suffered no appar ent ill effects. Its ECG was de tected by applying positive and ground leads in the left leg and a negative lead in the right arm. The ECG signal was then used for amplitude modulation of the microwave beamed on the rat’s chest.. “Much remains to be done be fore reasonable explanation may be presented for the observed phenomenon,” Giarola admitted. “The single experiment provide us wtih only a limited amount of information, and the interpreta tion of the results is thus very difficult.” “The most positive result,” he added, “is that the microwave used does have an influence on the ECG of the rat.” The professor said experi mentation could conceivably pro gress to the point the heart could be stopped. With more power, the procedure could possible be accomplished from considerable distance. That, Giarola concluded, could be a “death ray.” WEATHER Wednesday—Partly cloudy to? cloudy. Afternoon rainshowers, southerly winds 10-20 miles per hour. High 84, low 67. Thursday — Cloudy. After noon rainshowers and thunder showers, southerly winds 10-20 m.p.h. High 78, low 70. Houston — Partly cloudy. Northeasterly winds 10 m.p.h. 70 degrees. Monday preceding the annual event, according to Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigan. Graduate classes will not be dismissed and the period is not considered a holiday for universi ty employes, he said. Hannigan said junior and sen ior students who do not have aft ernoon classes may perform prep aratory work on Nov. 13-14, 17- 20 and 25, in addition to the Nov. 22-24 period. Torn, in charge of the construc tion, said work has been organ ized to fit the schedule. Center- pole erection by Company D-2 and the tying in of core logs will take place next week. Some preliminary cutting on Leo B. Margolian’s land seven miles south of College Station on Highway 6 will be done during the week with the majority of it, loading, transporting and stack ing the logs to be carried out Nov. 22-24. Torn said Margolian’s provision of a cutting area closer to the bonfire site than in previous years increases the possibility of the 1969 bonfire being “the largest ever.” Rudder requested the Com mandant’s Office, Accident and Fire Prevention Committee and the Firemen’s Training School of the Engineering Extension Serv ice to cooperate in safety aspects of the bonfire. Bonfire yell practice, at which the stack of logs will be burned, is scheduled the night of Nov. 26, the day before the A&M-Texas football game on Kyle Field. Filing Opens Thursday for Fish, BAs Filing for freshman class offi cers and senators will open Thursday, announced Mike Wiebe, Election Commission vice presi dent for publicity. A junior Senate reprsentative for the College of Business Ad ministration will also be elected, he said. “The last day to file will be Nov. 20,” he said, “with elections scheduled for Dec. 10 and a run off, if needed, on Dec. 17.” Applications for president, vice president, secretary-treasurer, so cial secretatry and five senators at large can be picked up in the Student Programs Office from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. through Nov. 20, Wiebe said. Polling places in the freshman election, he said, will be the base ment of the Memorial Student Center, the newstand by Sbisa Hall and the guard room of dorm 2. The Business Administration representative election will be held in Francis Hall, room 152. liiiiii* : ■ lliM I 1 IBBa J*! <1 - Y>, -f T[ wBm £ * - ' life* ' I , ' "*! SilJisgt % ? ■ WSKEm CONCLUDING CEREMONY The Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band, playing the Aggie War Hymn, lead the way toward the reviewing stand Tuesday afternoon in a Corps review held to salute the veterans who are students at Texas A&M. The event rounded out Veterans Day activities which in cluded placing wreaths at war memorials around campus and observing a moment of silence at noon. (Photo by David Middlebrooke) Veterans Day Marked By Review, Wreaths Texas A&M’s 3,000-member Corps of Cadets honored the esti mated 1,000 veterans attending the university with a military re view Tuesday, climaxing a full agenda of Veterans Day activities. The A&M observance also in cluded a minute of silence at noon, placement of wreaths on campus memorials and display of more than 100 American flags along the university’s main en trance and around the parade grounds. “We in the Corps of Cadets wished to express our apprecia tion to A&M’s veteran student for their service to our country in the proud tradition of our fore fathers,” explained Corps Com mander Matthews R. Carroll, sen ior from Annandale, Va. “This day,” noted the message read during- the review, “has been one for all Americans to pause and acknowledge with grateful respect and admiration the loyal ty, honor and sacrifices of the veterans of the armed forces of our land.” “These men whom we honor today,” the message continued, “symbolize the root substance of our corporate national personal ity, the ingredients of which are. ★ ★ ★ idealism, self - sacrifice, faith, bravery, compassion and patriot ism — not short, frenzied bursts of emotion, but long enduring love of country, firm holding and sure. “They are the tested ones, the quiet power possessed of a reason that stabilizes our nation in tu multuous times, in moments of challenge and confrontation.” Col. Jim H. McCoy, comman dant, was joined in the reviewing party by Medal of Honor winner Dr. Eli Whiteley. Whiteley, a professor at A&M, won the nation’s highest award for valor in World War II. ★ ★ ★ Corps To Begin Weekend With Parade in Houston Houston’s Main and Fannin Streets will showcase Saturday morning the A&M Corps of Cadets on one of its bi-annual Corps Trip football jaunts. The 35-minute parade led by Cadet Colonel Matthew R. Carroll of Annandale, Va., will help set the stage for the 2 p.m. Texas A&M-Rice football encounter at Rice Stadium. Thirty-one units of the 3,000- member Corps will assemble at 9 a.m. on Bell Street. Carroll, his staff and the Aggie Band turn onto Main at 10 a.m. to start the parade. Army and Air Force units com prising the Corps will march north on Main, turn east on Texas and south on Fannin to return to the assembly area for dismissal. Army Maj. Gen. Felix A. Davis, 75th Maneuver Area Command commanding general of Houston, will take unit salutes at Rusk and Main. Others with Davis on the re viewing sttand will include A&M President Earl Rudder, the uni versity’s board of directors and deans and Gen. George P. Munson, assistant district engineer of the Texas Highway Department in Houston. Invited to be in the reviewing party are Brig. Gen. Russell Guiteske, 446th Troop Carrier Wing commander; Col. Morgan Beamer, Ellington AFB com mander; Houston Mayor Louis Welch and city councilmen. Davis, 42, commanded Army Engineer units during World War II and the Korean conflict and has been with the 75th 10 years. The Houston native took command of the unit in 1965. He served three years in the Navy as a seaman, attended the U. S. Naval Academy and was in the Aleutians and the China- Burma-India theater during WW II. Students, Administrators Work To Improve Laundry re uf ol ly Dale Foster battalion Staff Writer You are in your room, resting ialf-asleep atop the books on 'our desk. Your roommate re urns from picking up his laun- iry, screaming something unin- eliigible about the type of serv- ce and cursing an imaginary fig ure. “My laundry came back two days late, and I had a date for die football weekend.” “I am missing a button on one of my best shirts.” “They lost one of my socks somewhere over there.” “A pair of my jeans was mis placed, and I haven’t gotten them back for over a week.” “The limit on the amount of laundry we can have is too low.” Those problems that are legi timate, and not just exaggerated, will find ready ears before mem bers of the Campus Laundry Committee. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv, “We do have a procedure where any student with a complaint can take it up with the committee,” noted Director of Management Services Howard Vestal. “We go to great lengths to try to remedy any problem the student may have.” “Anything we ruin or lose, we will assume responsibility for and will compensate the student,” add- 6d Campus Laundry Manager George Hartsock. The 10-member laundry com mittee is composed of Director of Civilian Student Activities How ard Perry, Assistant Commandant Maj. Edmond S. Solymosy, Hart- sock, Vestal, and six .students. The student representatives are Robert Harding, Jack Hollimon, and Albert Kinkead from the Corps of Cadets, and Alan Byrd, Gene Fisher, and Allen Mikulen- cak from the civilian student body. The two groups are apointed an nually by Corps Staff and the Civilian Student Council, respec tively. “We have had the committee fop three or four years,” Vestal said, “and it has worked very well. Our main problem is that many students don’t know the committee exists.” “Hopefully, Mr. Hartsock can reconcile any matter that comes to his attention, but if the stu dent is still dissatisfied, he can appear before the committee,” he continued. Vestal also emphasized that the student members of the committee make the decision on what is an appropriate compensation. “In addition, we try to get at least one individual from each student group to serve on the committee the following year to provide continuity for the com mittee,” he commented. Vestal believed that the com mittee served two good purposes, “It represents the interests of students with regard to laundry, and they, in turn, have done us a favor.” “There is a lot of special treat ment given to the students’ cloth ing,” he reported. “Two girls are hired just to sew on buttons, and another does nothing but look for rips and tears.” He added that the laundry tries to hold the costs down for the student to give him his money’s worth, noting that he felt that the users are given a tremend ous bargain on the deal. Pointing out that at many uni versities the laundry and other service facilities are contracted to private enterprise, he said that this results in higher prices for the students because the private businessman has to make a prof it. “Every month or so we price out a typical bundle at commer cial laundries,” Vestal continued. “Also, we authorized five more pieces in each bundle this year.” Hartsock said that the most recent survey was taken in Sep tember. “We priced a 35-piece bundle at the laundries in College Sta tion and downtown Bryan and the average cost was $4.35. This compares to our charge to the student of about $1.50,” he re lated. Dorm students are charged $25 per semester for use of the cam pus laundry facilities which in cludes one bag of 35 items per week. There is a charge for ex tra clothing. “Extra items cost about one- third of what local commercial laundribs charge,” Hartsock add ed. “We desperately try to main tain a one-day service, but some times we get behind.” He figured that one lot of clothes, which consists of 144 bundles, is run through the laun dry each hour of a 40-hour week. The dry weight of a lot is ap proximately 1,800 pounds. “Of course, this does not in clude the laundry we do for the faculty nor the uniforms and work clothes for university em ployees,” he continued. “We’re almost at capacity now,” the laundry manager said. “As more dorms are built and opened and students pay the com pulsory laundry fee for use of the services, one of three things would have to be done; have two shifts, go to a three- or four-day delivery schedule, or automate the plant as much as possible with new machinery.” A tour of the plant shows that steps are taken to insure that no problems will arise. Laundry bags are turned inside out, item counts are double-checked, all items are given an identifiable mark, and at the end of the process, there is touch-up work and more recounts. “Ban-Ion shirts and stay- press trousers are given extra handling,” Hartsock said. “All other items are divided into six or seven wash categories. Also, laundry bags are washed because I feel that there is no purpose in using dirty laundry bags for clean clothing.” Vestal noted that some troubles result from labor problems due to a saturated labor market in this area. “We have a tough time hiring enough people. This not only applies to the laundry, but also to food services and other campus facilities,” he said. “We are working at almost a 50 per cent handicap at the pres ent time,” related Hartsock. “We have hired a total of 18 bundlers, and eight we now have are trainees.” Vestal pinpoints two labor prob lems: the Fair Labor Standards Act cut the possible number- of hours that could and were being worked from 54 to 40, and the heavy labor has shifted off of an almost all-male work force to a largely female force. “We are desperately in need of three men right now,” Hartsock added. “We get about 20 or 25 students in the office each week with some sort of problem,” he continued. “Sometimes problems arise when students borrow clothing and we end up with different laundry marks in the same bag.” “Each laundry mark issued to a student is good for 20 years,” he concluded. Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. H B