The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 27, 1971, Image 6

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    Page 6
College Station, Texas
mg
Wednesday, January 27, 1971
THE BATTALION
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CLOSED
MONDAVS
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Yook,
ViQLe/vri^£ c Gift
Ht/VDOOMIT^RS
iSUittle
THE GIFT HOUSE OF ORIGINALS
4401 MILAM - BRYAN. TEX.
Mii
Forty per cent of Texas’ bays polluted
^ ^c:
^ ...
Forty per cent of Texas’ 1.4
million acres of Gulf Coast estu
arine areas are environmentally
contaminated, a NASA earth re
sources expert said Monday night
. A on* ifV ;
at A&M.
“If all pollution were stopped,”
Lea F. Childs declared, “the areas
would come back to their natural
state almost immediately.”
■
Childs spoke to 100 men attend
ing the Sea Grant Program sym
posium on remote sensing in
marine biology and fishery re
sources. The two-day program
ended yesterday.
“We must have industry and
progress, but at the same time
conserve our natural marshlands,”
the Houston Manned Spacecraft
Center special assistant said.
Childs joined NASA’s earth re
sources program in 1963 and is
currently assigned to the Earth
Observations Division.
Color slides from manned space
flights and personal ground and
aerial photographs were used to
illustrate man’s disregard for the
environment.
gjQ'Vplti |f§l
* Ideas and people make our bus
We're seeding graduates with majors
in: Business Administration / Eco
nomics / Psychology / Mathemat
ics / Liberal Arts / Marketing /
Architectural Design / Mechanical
Engineering / Personnel Admin
istration / Accounting / Computer
Sciences / Food and Hotel Man
agement / Traffic and Transporta
tion Management / Management
Engineering / and Industrial
Engineering.
We want idea-people to turn us on
in the following fields:
business.
We’re in the retailing, food and personal
services business. And YOUR IDEAS
can help us do a better job.
Here’s where YOU come in. We’re
changing. And growing. And we’re look
ing for bright young people who can
help us make our changes work. YOU
are one of the new-idea people we're
looking for.
HERE’S OUR OFFER: You can start
out in management right now. You make
good money. You put your own ideas to
work and evaluate the results. You move
up fast. You work almost anywhere in
the world, with opportunity to travel.
You’re a big part of our operation. And
you accomplish whatever your talents
lead you to work toward. That’s it.
YOU have the opportunity. We have
openings. Let’s get together and see if
our ideas are in the same bag.
Our representatives will be on campus
soon. See your placement director and
sign up for an interview NOW!
RETAILING
BUYING
ACCOUNTING
AUDITING
. ARCHITECTURE
WE LL BE INTERVIEWING:
FEBRUARY 2, 1971
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
v , • ♦. / j'l
MERCHANDISING
If you can’t make our scheduled inter-
i; view date, don’t sweat it. Write us direct
and find out if our ideas are in the same
bag. Write to:
PERSONNEL
FOOD MANAGEMENT
VENDING COLLEGE RELATIONS MANAGER
SYSTEMS ANALYSIS DEPT. NP
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
PERSONAL SERVICES ARMY & AIR FORCE EXCHANGE SERVICE
sssarTT* . „„
TRM4SPORTMION
. 3911 WALTON WALKER BLVD
•riff
M,
~~—
DALLAS. TEXAS 75222
Equal Opportunity Employer
Childs pointed out problems cre
ated by dredging practices, resi
dential recreation developments,
shipping accidents, mineral ex
ploration, all types of industry,
city sewage disposal, garbage
land fills and engineering prac
tices to take care of facility over
loading.
Childs said he was surprised
to find nature has fought back in
East Galveston Bay.
Citing 1951 and 1971 Texas
State Department of Health re
ports on contaminated shellfish
areas, Childs disclosed there are
51,000 more acres today support
ing uncondemned shellfish than
20 years ago. He also reported
the Sabine Bay is 100 per cent
contaminated today.
Childs estimated, from Texas
State Department of Health re
ports, that 40 per cent of the
state’s estuarine areas are totally
contaminated.
Out of the 10 major estuarine
areas on the Gulf Coast only one
—the bays off Goose Island State
Park above Rockport — is in its
natural state.
“I hope this great and rich
state has the foresight to
straint and preserve this one es
tuarine we still have,” Childs
said.
He observed there is a direct
relationship between industrial
ization and effects on the marsh
lands.
Showing a mass fish kill, Childs
said he read a statistic where
40 million fish were killed by
jnatural and unnatural circum
stances in 1970.
“There must be 40 million dead
fish in this one scene,” he in
sisted.
Cihlds said bay and channel
petro-chemical spills have a more
damaging effect than any off
shore accident.
He cautioned the public on hys
teria about the environment.
“I think we have to let the ex
perts weigh the facts,” he added.
“We really don’t know that much
about what we are doing to the
environment.”
»y CLIFF!
jjattalion S
You can
guts*
1 That’s v
Texas Age
174.73 win 1
A utry Con
jay night,
§| Southwest (
Lo defeat
ine of the
f n the leag
TCU, to
4 {umbed Sa
llhart inta'
S| with a 93-
|ver Soutl
ay night
Texas at
ague’s coi
ith a 89-
Illinois in
The Agj
: - L
aJESH
IT’LL BE BOUND FOR TEXAS in February, but notky
the usual method, sailing. This 90 foot replica of a tw
masted square rigger of the 18th century is being builtfot
a Texas amusement park. When finished it will be moral
to the aquatic park site between Dallas and Fort Wortli
(AP Wirephoto)
Crowd helps boy
buy back horses
Campus briefs
$5,000 given A&i
SAL)
“Wher
standi
240
PONTIAC, Mich. (A>) — Eyes
bleary with tears, 11-year-old
Dean Herron took his entire sav
ings of $75 to the public auction,
hoping he could get back his
three runaway ponies.
The situation appeared dismal
for the lad, whose Shetland pon
ies strayed from a farm and were
later captured by Oakland Coun
ty sheriff’s deputies Dec. 22.
The boarding costs to Oakland
County totaled around $400. An
auction was odered, under laws
concerning “animals running at
large.”
“Do I hear a bid of $30 for this
pony?” asked District Court
Judge Gerald E. McNally of
Clarkston, when he opened the
bidding at the Oakland County
Animal Shelter Monday.
The Detroit lad stepped for-
xvard and gasped, “Thirty dollars.
That’s too much. You should
start at $25.”
The judge asked, “Are you
bidding?”
“They’re my ponies,” the boy
cried.
A conference was held between
the judge and Dr. F. Hugh Wil
son, shelter director. Bidding was
reopened again, but it was on all
three ponies “as a package.”
Tom Finley, a friend of the
family entered the bid of $75—
the money the youth saved from
doing chores.
About 25 other spectators were
at the auction, but they did not
bid after learning of the youth’s
story.
The family said the ponies es
caped from a farm at Lyon
Township, where they were
boarded, when a snomobile tore
down a fence. The sheriff’s dep
uties later spent six hours re
trieving them.
The lad purchased the ponies
last summer, with money earned
by scrubbing floors.
Du Pont Co. has presented
A&M a $5,000 aid to education
award as part of the company’s
1971 science and engineering
grant program.
Larry Dirnberger, technical su
perintendent at the LaPorte plant
near Houston, came here Friday
with the $2,500 awards to the
Chemical and Mechanical Engi
neering Departments.
“We appreciate this continuing
support,” Engineering Dean Fred
Benson said. “It is very valuable
to us.”
★ ★ ★
Dryden, Conrad
topic of articles
Articles by A&M English pro
fessors Dr. Stanley Archer and
Dr. John Van Domelen are being
published in several journals.
Archer’s “Some Early Refer
ences to Dryden” was in the
November issue of “Notes and
Queries,” publication of the Ox
ford University Press. Previous
ly uncited references from the
Restoration are discussed.
Van Domelen has had three ar
ticles on Joseph Conrad accepi*
A reading of Conrad’s charafin
will be in the next issue oUCk
radiana.” A longer artkk,
the Beginning Was the ffonf,;
Awful Eloquence and Right Ei
pression in the Work of Conni
will be in the winter edition
the South Central Modern lit
guage Association’s “Studia.'
The third, on Conrad and4
power of rhetoric in three Com
works, has been accepted for
ture publication in “Conradim
★ ★ ★
Vets in Houston
for conference
Faculty members from Ai!
College of Veterinary Medki
will be in Houston Friday th:
Tuesday, Feb. 2, for the Soot
western Animal Health Conlr
ence for Livestockmen and Ten
Veterinary Medical Associa'.'
5kth annual contention!*
The third annual livestock
ference is designed to benefit
men and explains veterinary w
icine work with dairy, hois
poultry, swine and cattle.
J t
PiZZA
7.*" ..
LOOK FOR OUR NEW LOCATION
NORTH GATE
RALPH’S NO. 1
311 UNIVERSITY DRIVE
.'.V’*
PHONE; 846-5777
r:>r
.
Menu
MOZZARELLA CHEESE
PIZZAS
:»SP#
GREEN OLIVE
BLACK OLIVE
MUSHROOM
PEPPERONI
SAUSAGE
ANCHOVY
Sm.
Med.
Lg-
$ .95
$1.25
$1.90
1.15
1.65
2.20
1.15
1.65
2.20
1.15
1.65
2.20
1.15
1.65
2.20
1.25
1.75
2.55
1.25
1.75
2.55
1.25
1.75
2.55
1.25
1.75
2.55
1.25
1.75
2.55
1.25
1.75
2.55
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1.75
2.55
1.15
1.65
2.20
1.55
2.15
3.05
1.40
1.95
2.80
1.50
2.10
3.00
1.55
2.15
3.05
FREE DORM DELIVERY
Police training division
receives $11,206 grant
A&M’s Police Training Division
will conduct four training schools
from an $11,206 action grant ap
proved by the Texas Criminal
Justice Council, announced Chief
Instructor Ira E. Scott.
Scott said the Engineering Ex
tension Service program is funded
through the Brazos Valley Devel
opment Council. Officers from
Robertson, Leon, Madison,
Brazos, Grimes, Burleson and
Washington Counties are eligible
to apply.
A. C. Johnson, assistant direc
tor and planner for BVDC, said
the grant includes two scholar
ships to a Southern Methodist
University management short
course eight scholarships to the
Texas Department of Public
Safety School and a scholarship
to the Southern Police Institute
in Alabama.
The training is a means of
curbing the rising crime rate with
TCJC receiving its funds from
the state’s share of federal Omni
bus Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act funding.
One of the four BVDC schools
ends Friday. The 160-hour ad
vanced course included modern
police technology with a he*
emphasis on criminal psycholoj
A four-week basic course
scheduled Feb. 1-12 and M®
1-12 and gives the officers!
minimum requirements for cer!
fication under the new state Ir
A two-week police supers®
school is scheduled in May £
the final training session will
in police-community relation!
August, Johnson said.
FBI Agent Bob WiattofBrp
will assist in the basic law
forcement course and will t(£
firearms training, Scott
ATTENTION TO ALL
JRS. & SOPHS
Urgent
Pictures will be made at the University Studio according to
the following schedule.
A-D
Jan. 18 - 22
E-l
Jan. 25-29
J-M
Feb. 1-5
N-R
Feb. 8 -12
S-V
Feb. 15 -19
WXYZ
Feb. 22-26
Make ups will be made March 2 -12.
Your cooperation is necessary for your picture to appear in
the Aggieland.