mmmm bad lab fith the shift; s to the Currfe ction Depart!)*; le laboratory^ non-reading pnj i human learti; t, Roach said, ;he lab has a d® it schools in d* isment of hum; evelopment pnl. in effective mod*; with th» pri provide qualifii graduate si*, ional psycholop. efs ; will be how ms KORA, ad Revision a the Golden h mdcasting. Mil* tion KORA, wi Education late profs f two educatiu Curriculum as •tment effects i announced tj MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL BEEF STEW WITH GARDEN FRESH VEGETABLES in Casserole Choice of Green Vegetable Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of Mom’s Pie or Cake $0.99 TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL baked meat loaf WITH TOMATO SAUCE Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL CHICKEN FRIED STEAK WITH CREAM GRAVY ssociate profc rent head sat ■ersity’s largK fulltime teacl- Last fall, Cl! and 385 undm mpbell, 43, vi l responsi rses. Current)! ment chairmn ege, Williams- ground includts , political sd I philosophy t! dlins will co« * University Is e d ucatioi ! graduate i; IcKinney a! jxas schools. Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 otte players- with any 12- and balance naffected by THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER ITALIAN SPAGHETTI Served with Spiced Meat Balls & Sauce Parmesan Cheese Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee $0.99 FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL OCEAN CATFISH FILET Tarter Sauce Cole Slaw Grandma’s Cornbread Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 SATURDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING GULF SHRIMP Cocktail Sauce French Fried Potatoes Cole Slaw Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 1 SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served With Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee Giblet Gravy and your choice of any two vegetables $0.99 For your protection we purchase meats, fish and poultry from Government inspected plants. L THE BATTALION Wednesday, May 13, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 7 Ag scientist plans to study ice layers An oil rig may begin drilling in the Antarctic within two years, but drillers won’t be looking for oil. They will be seeking knowl edge of the history of ice layers, geologic sediments and untouched deep ocean marine life. Plans for drilling through the Antarctic’s Ross Ice Shelf in preparation for international re search were initiated by a Na tional Academy of Sciences ad hoc group convened by Dr. Sayed Z. El-Sayed. The Ross Shelf drilling project, expected to break ice in the Aus tral summer of 1971, will go through the 200 to 1,400-meter thick shelf. Holes will provide oceanographers, glaciologists and geologists access for examining sediments and marine organisms under the ice. “The area has been undisturbed since the Pleistocene,” commented El-Sayed, appointed last Novem ber to convene the Academy- National Research Council ad hoc planning group. “This may turn out to be one of the most significant scientific projects yet undertaken in the Antarctic, from the point of view of uncovering new knowledge about a part of the ocean never before penetrated directly by a scientific instrument,” stated Dr. J. H. Zumberge, NAS Glaciology Panel member of Arizona. The 11-member ad hoc group including Dr. Louis J. Thompson, director of Terramechanics Lab oratory, met in Washington in late March. It made recommenda tions for a broad research pro gram and considered engineering problems and logistics-engineer ing management of the drilling project. Recommendations are being re viewed this week in Tucson by an NAS Panel on Glaciology. The plan will be presented at the 11th Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) meetings in Oslo next August and later at the International Oceanographic Assembly in Tokyo. On the ad hoc group with El- Sayed and Thompson were rep resentatives of Wisconsin, Ohio State, Stanford, Rockefeller and Arizona Universities, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, the Ar my’s Cold Research and Engi neering Lab and U. S. Geological Survey. El-Sayed, veteran in Antarctic oceanographic research, was ask ed to convene the panel by Dr. Laurence M. Gould, chairman of the NAS Polar Research Commit tee. A three-dimensional model of the shelf constructed here by for mer architecture graduate student Fred Wallis was used at the March meeting. El-Sayed said a nine-inch diam eter pilot hole will probably be drilled near McMurdo Station, at about 80 degrees south latitude and several hundred kilometers from the edge of the ice shelf. “Three holes are being consid ered,” he noted. “One to be used by biologists requires extreme care to prevent contamination of the water under the shelf. Glaci ologists would obtain ice cores from another hole, which would penetrate only partially into the shelf.” The third drilling is proposed to pass through the shelf, water and into the bottom, providing for examination of a sedimentary environment succeeding the peri od of ice maximum when ice was aground at the point of explor ation. Biologists’ interest will be in the organic world beneath the shelf. The project could lead to discovery of organisms and pro cesses surviving—perhaps flour ishing—in a region from which upper level marine life has been excluded. Dr. Willis E. Pequenat and Dr. William M. Sackett provided ideas for biological and chemical aspects of the project. Other studies including meas urement of water properties, stratigraphical and chronological studies and investigation of heat flow through the ocean floor are being considered. The Terramechanics Lab head ed by Thompson has made ice penetration studies. The civil engineering professor conferred with Dr. John R. Pedigo in pe troleum engineering and officials of a Houston drilling firm about the project. “From the standpoint of cur rent drilling technology and state of the art from experiences on Alaska’s North Slope, the Ross Ice Shelf drilling project should not meet any insurmountable problems,” Thompson said. Killeen, San Marcos have anti-war protests Monday By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two anti-war incidents occurred in Central Texas Monday night. At Killeen, near Ft. Hood, more than 350 persons cheered when the City Council unanimously de nied anti-war protestors a parade permit for Saturday, to coincide with Armed Forces Day at Ft. Hood. Some 50 persons from the Oleo Strutt coffee house protested the council’s quick action. One said they had been told the matter would be discussed. Some protestors chanted “oink, oink” at police at City Hall, where the council met. One person, wear ing a T-shirt stenciled with a red clenched fist, said, “We will hold our parades anyway, capitalists.” About 75 students walked with lighted candles at Southwest Texas State University at San Marcos, and 75 more joined them in a walk to President B. M. Jones’ house. There they asked that May 13 be declared “a day of mourning for all people who have died by violence, especially those at Kent State and in Vietnam.” “Please remember,” Jones said, “that any decisions I make must be made in the light of what is best for 9,300 students, not just the 150 or so here tonight.” “This campus pulls more on a panty raid than on a peace march,”'said protest leader Mike Holman, “so we have more work to do. The next time we come we will bring 9,300.” Soil judging team wins second place in national The soil judging team won second in the National Soil Judg ing Contest May 8 in Michigan. Team members were Roger Blaekwelder of Pilot Point; Dar rell Engel, Rosebud; Michael Hoch, Garden City; Fred Minzen- mayer, Winters; and Danny Bar rett, Pampa. Professor J. F. Mills is coach. Minzenmayer was third high point individual, and Hoch was eighth high. Purdue University won and Ok lahoma University took third place. 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