Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, September 6, 1972 Campus Briefs NASA Gives Grant The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has approv ed a $35,000 grant to Dr. Gilbert M. Plass of A&M for a study of the interaction of light with the atmospheres of Venus, Earth and Mars. Olympics May Be Rescheduled Arbor Day Kits Available Soon Arbor Day Program kits are being offered again this fall for delivery before Christmas, accord ing to the Texas Forest Service. The kits are free but available only to teachers and conservation- minded organizations in Texas. The quantRy is limited to one kit per teacher or organization. Arbor Day is a special occasion, throughout the United States, during which the importance apd planting of trees is observed. The next special observance of Arbor Day in Texas will be Jan. 19, 1973. Arbor Day kits contain two quality pecan seeds (pecan is the state tree of Texas) and a pro gram brochure which contains planting instructions, program outline and appropriate aids for on Arbor Day observance. Teach ers find planting the seeds to be an excellent fall and springtime classroom project. The pecan seeds are provided by the Texas Pecan Growers As sociation which annually cooper ates with the Texas Forest Serv ice in the state-wide observance of Arbor Day. Teachers and ■« program chair men wanting a free Arbor Day kit should address their requests to the Texas Forest Service, Col lege Station, Texas 77843. wnsssm STARTS TODAY 1:45 - 4:15 - 6:45 - 9:15 “MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTTS” With Venesa Redgraves AM P4J.S1 HELD OVER 1:15 - 3:18 - 5:21 - 7:24 - 9:27 “LAST PICTURE SHOW” QUEEN ADULT ART—LAST NITE 7:15 - 9:15 “TEMPORARY WIVES” Skyway Twin EAST SCREEN AT 8:15 P. M. 3 James Bond Hits No. 1 At 8:15 p. m. “DR. NO’ (PG) No. 2 At 10:00 p. m. ‘GOLD FINGER (PG) No. 3 At 12:00 p. m. “FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE” All With Sean Connery WEST SCREEN AT 8:05 P. M. “WAR BETWEEN MEN & WOMEN” With Jack Lemmon At 9:50 p. m. “CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB’’ With James Stewart Dr. Plass, head of TAMU’s Phy sics Department, said the project mainly is a theoretical mathemat ical study where various mathe matical formulas will be compar ed with NASA data. He noted light interacts with an atmosphere and by following the scattering events it is pos sible to determine the composi tion. One application will be to de termine what makes up the clouds of Venus, something not known at the present time. Other studies involve looking back at Earth through spacecraft sensors to de termine the chlorophyl content of the oceans and a study of color in the twilight sky on Earth. Dr. George W. Kattawar, asso ciate professor of physics, is co principal investigator on the proj ect. The NASA funding began last year, with the new grant begin ning Oct. 1. ★ ★ ★ Career Day Scheduled Career Day in the Colleges of Agriculture, Engineering and Sci ence has been scheduled Sept. 30 at A&M. Coinciding with the Texas A&M-U. S. Military Academy football game, Career Day will provide visiting students informa tion on the various programs in the three colleges. Officials expect 5,000 students, parents and teachers for the event, which will have agriculture and engineering exhibits in the Zachry Engineering Center and College of Science exhibits in the Biological Sciences Building. TAMU faculty and student rep resentatives will be available to answer questions. Career Day ac tivities will run from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Grads Receive Grant A grant by the Houston section of the American Welding Society has been awarded to two A&M graduate students for develop mental studies of thermite weld ing. Recipients of the grant are Frank C. Eller of Houston and Thomas M. Glynn of Garland, an nounced Dr. Clint A. Bertrand. They are master’s degree can didates in industrial technology, an option of the Engineering Technology Department. The $400 grant will be used for development of thermite welding of steel tubing. Findings could have applications for pipeline construction. Eller and Glynn re ceived the grant on the basis of their presentation to the execu tive committee of the AWS Hous ton section, explained Bertrand, engineering technology professor. The separate research will build on work conducted under AWS grant by another industrial tech nology graduate student last year. ★ ★ ★ Lunsford Gets Grant Dr. Jack H. Lunsford has re ceived a $21,600 National Science Foundation grant to continue re search entitled “Gas-Solid Inter actions at Semiconductor Surfaces.” The research, which began three years ago under NSF sponsor ship, has been approved fopi — T more years. Support duti t ||VI three-year period is expectM 1 total over $60,000. Dr. Lunsford, associate W.ASHL sor of chemistry, said the Lon’s 1 has applications to the Pon >t be chemical industry whereoxiMJunes .reactions have commercial* D( , ni ocs portance. s It is expected to give its The fei^* into the importance of ion,Jef sp«= cule reactions on semicontaLletim. surfaces. Semiconductors,, tes of as a catalyst, are used in Mocrat, a tion reactions to determirJer the the ion is held on the surfan fL rr^. how it reacts with other eLL to 11 cals, especially hydrocarkM we! . 3 explained. IM’ eles- MUNICH > — The Interna tional Olympic Committee asked the Munich Games’ organizers to resume competition Wednesday and, if possible, hold the closing ceremony on Sunday as original ly scheduled. A spokesman for the organiz ing committee said it favored extending the Games for another 24 hours to facilitate reschedul ing of events postponed on Tues day after the Arab terrorist at tack on the Israeli Olympic team. If the organizers have their way, the Games would end on Monday. The spokesman said it would be difficult to squeeze the post poned events into an already crowded schedule. The IOC made its wishes known after meeting past midnight in a downtown hotel. The Games are to resu following Wednesday morning’s memorial service at the Olympic Stadium for the Israeli victims. The rescheduling question has still to be resolved, the spokes man said, adding it would be taken up again later Wednesday by both the IOC and the Games’ organizers. UQUIDTUEL CHAFING DISH LIQUID FUEL STERN0 12 0Z. PLASTIC BOTTLE. BURNS WITH A CLEAN, BLUE FLAME WITHOUT SMOKE AMERICAN GREETING CARDS COMPLETE ASSORTMENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS V* •\ (i y wrzzr- v K00L IT 0 ELMER’S GLUE 1 HAIR SPRAY O’ ROYAL PORTABLE TYPEWRITER 01 $ PREVENTS ENGINE OVER HEATING - ONE QUART W1L UQIMMM GLUE ALL FOR HOME SCHOOL OR OFFICE- 40Z. STYLE-REGULAR SUPER,OR UHSCENTED 13 0Z. 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