ige 10 THE BATTALION f WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1978 OUTDOOR RECREATION COMMITTEE WE RENT EQUIPMENT TENTS, BACKPACKS, SLEEPING BAGS, STOVES, & MORE TO STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF for nominal fees Check the Outdoor Recreation Cubicle Rm. 216 MSC to reserve equipment ORC Lawrence’s ’Hair Styling Salon We cut hair like I porcupines make love Very carefully! 822-1183 301 Bizzell STUDY IN GUADALAJARA, MEXICO The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. BUY, SELL, RENT . . . Battalion Classified Pulls THESE PRICES GOOD i nuivo—rrvi—on i— a FEBRUARY 2-3-4- QUANTHY RIGHTS RESERVED a fully accredited UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA program, offers July 3- August 11. anthropology, art. bilingual education, folklore, history, political science. Spanish language and litera ture. intensive Spanish. Tuition: $245; board and room with Mexican family: $285. For brochure: GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. Alumni 211. University of Arizona. Tucson. Arizona 85721. (602) 884-4729. Hill to sue on costly minini Cc United Press Internaltional AUSTIN — Attorney General John Hill said Tuesday he will file suit to block enforcement of federal strip mining legislation which could prevent mining of eight billion tons of Texas lignite. The suit against U.S. Interior Sec retary Cecil Andrus will be filed in U.S. district court seeking to set aside federal regulations dealing with strip mining on land designated as prime farm land. Hill said the designation is tpo broad, and could make strip mining so costly it would be prohibitive on Texas grazing land. “It’s just bureaucratic overkill to have these regulations,” he said. “These bureaucrats in Washington just don’t understand what is and what is not prime farm land in this state.” Under terms of the federal regu lations, topsoil would have to be stripped from prime farm land and stored separately from other soil covering the lignite deposits. Hill said grazing land would bene fit from a mixing of the topsoil and other soil before it is replaced over stripmining sites. But the cost of re moving and storing the two types of soil separately would make the cost of lignite mining prohibitive, he said. “Eight billion tons ofTexaslij are at stake. This is 70 to 80pa of our near-surface lignite,” he Hill said state plans to come; percent of the electrical plants in Texas to lignite powg 1985 will be jeopardized by thti eral regulations. “If we lost this capacity to use Li 11 ' Cc ■veloi Del Monte FRUIT I COCKTAIL K Del Monte Yellow % I CUNG : PEACHES ♦I *303 gsiiWUJSi ■ I *3°? 17 oz. ■ ■ 16 oz. cans ^ «>ns ^ ^ » Feb. 4 is the last day to turn your cards in. a winner Del Monte PEAR HALVES *303 16 oz. cons Crackers , 1 lb. box * W Del Monte PINEAPPLE *1.5 10 oz. con 39 39 Del Monte CATSUP Del Monte Whole GREEN BEANS 14 02. 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Oscar Mayer NeuhofTs 12 oz. pkg. 99* R0U ROAST fniM * V 9 SMOKIES >i» FRANKS . tx,,. ,. * 88* MYW SPEAK ££, ' t« BOLOGNA * 79 CHAR-BROIL S1IAK . * Reg. or thick 8 oz. pkg. _ _ „ Beef tib. pu,. * 1” PICKLES. . ^ ^ NECKB0NES t l k „ 39 iTATGES & 10. s9 ORANGES u ”. 4 t, GRAPEFRUIT DEL APPLES Texas Ruby Red . , . St, 79 Extra Fancy Red .... Jt, 99 YELLOW ONIONS 2 k . 29 TOMATOES -N Sa,ad 4. 3 ,bs i the FRIENDLIEST STORES IN TOWN ★ 2700 Texas Ave. Sauth ★ 3516 Texas 'Ave. ★ 200 East 24th St. + 9 Redmond Terrace COLLEGE STATION ami BRYAN. TEXAS Double fisH Green Stamps every Tuesday wftti^2. 5 °or more purchase. GIVE nite for electrical generation, Wf have to import more coall® 1 * 1 ^ Wyoming,” he said. “Because costly, the federal methodwoiitilf i jj e Texas lignite out of business. It:J(!5i environmentally unsound.” P , ^ Hill said he was filing the st®.'* 11 the request of the Texas Rat® Commission, which regulates® Math midgel J', al‘ T mining acitivity in the state. The federal regulations classify more than 800,000 actt Texas, which cover 70 to of the near-surface lignite depn tniss< as prime farm land. “The acreage in question is prime farm land,” Hill’s suiti tends. The suit asks the federal emit declare the federal definition prime farm land invalid. T ege linii o th Th ;q.f< mati linii illet from pocket Fii to calculatorsm United Press Internatioiul |i Fiv Do pocket calculators [Ijieroi mathematical weaklings ofstui “Heavens, no," says Dorothy L. Bernstein, m eleett'd President of the Math cal Association of America. Niad thousand college math tcache: long to the association. “You learn to use the calculi lasic The [early E icluc Ihed ngii but you also must learn to ah(lH art c lystei Lin asic Ippai lassn subtract and divide and nwl without them. That way, ifyou dilator breaks down orifyou'rei island, you can do math.” Dr. Bernstein is chairman Mathematics Departmeul Goucher College in Baltimore, over the past 40 years she a™ dispensed theorems andsuchbj dents at the University of Cali at Berkeley, Brown Universili Rhode Island, the Universityol cousin, and Rochester Univen,V ren1 The interview focused on ■ ^ lems on the math front and c® 0 ' 11 tunities for math majors. ■* tiri Dr. Bernstein left the impn rayt mtii Tin ful omi mnt himul that if she were stuck on am without a pocket calculator, work on math problems for fin relaxation until rescued “I don’t think there issuchal as being dumb or smart at mat! said. “It is a question of motivatio how you were taught. “I think nine-tenths ofthetn with poor math performance that many were not taught prop “We know this is true. Well persons who had to drop« school for one reason or anotk then 10 or 15 years later go knowing why they want to math to advance in a job or lo better paying one. We obserw they learn math. Motivation the difference. Dr. Bernstein thinks wellof high school mathematics teafl despite the fact that the Sdio Aptitude Test scores in mati been dropping over thepastdec “Some students who come could be better prepared but are just as good or better th* ever were at the college age, said. “Just about all of them are» more articulate and catch onfi Why major in math? “That’s where the jobs are computers and accountingan^ tics,” Dr. Bernstein said. T practical applications cli rapidly. One of our concernsir do you prepare students to mathematics in applied ways the applications change every 10 years? “Our answer is to give them* good basic math. That way they get new applications know what to do about it. “Good pure math include! cuius, advanced calculus, advl algebra, topology functional and differential equations. The job opportunities just multiplying, according to DrT tein. “It used to be mathematic! used as a mainstay mostly i”? neering, physics and (.Tieinistiy said. “Now the calls for math nu'b coming from the fields ofecoi* 1 biology, medicine, psychQ|| sociology. “I heard the other day ofs® 1 ' looking for a mathematic* thropologist! I'm not sure wW is.” Dr. Bernstein is the first''# head the Mathematical Assoca 1 She doesn t think the "i 11 movement had anything tod 1 her selection. Next question: Is it true (lull are smarter at math than fc* Boys consistently outscore pd the math part of the SATs. T don t believe there is a ferentiation when it comes t for math. Given equal oppoiW females can do as well as malr| So why the differences records? “In the past. Dr. Bernstein “girls have been discouraged going on in math — pm part uck Bi