THE BATTAL^ MONDAY, JANUARY 2 1980 local PageS College Bowl to challenge Aggie minds a ti ol bi y‘ th Stl of' say cla dw wel the wh a d; maj Si f alw sou tha ans be say for we sin ( di\ op. me she go- un wr be tee en thi wi rat ioi go ca: T\ ini an “1 fas ec tai ch “E or al< By TODD WOODARD Campus Reporter j*ky Mathias is a senior English IT ^or at the University of Texas, piring his four years at UT he has ^rried a 4.0 grade point average. \lathias thought himself pretty smart until he tried answering ques tions in preparation for the College Bowl. The questions that Mathias tried were similar to these: Name the famous Prussian who helped Washington drill his troops at Valley Forge. Who painted the famous fres co titled “The School of Athens?” What is the stage name of Eric Weiss? Students from hundreds of colleges in the United States and 12 What’s up at Texas A&M MONDAY COMMUNITY SINGERS: Will hold a third rehearsal for Feb. 17 performance at 7:30 p.m. in the Brazos Center. BAHA’I CLUB: Will hold a discussion on “The Relativity of Religious Truth” at 7:30 in the Meditation Room of the All-Faith’s Chapel. WATER SKI CLUB: Will show the film “The Best of Tournament Water Skiing” at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. Plans for the Polar Bear tournament will he discussed LUTHERAN STUDENT MOVEMENT: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 305 Rudder. TUESDAY DANCE ARTS SOCIETY: Tap classes will begin at 7 p.m. in 267 G. Rollie White Coliseum. AGRONOMY SOCIETY: J. B. Dixon will speak on Saudi Arabia at 7:15 p.m. in 103 Soil and Crop Science Bldg. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: Mark Wilson will speak on “Choosing Between a Large and Small Com pany” at 7:30 p.m. in 203 Zachry. SOCIOLOGY CLUB: Will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 106 Bolton Hall. WOMEN’S LACROSSE: Will meet in the MSC Main Lounge at 7 p.m. Anyone interested in joining is invited to attend. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 108 Harrington. AGGIES AIDE: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder. CLASS OF 1980: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. WEDNESDAY NURSING SOCIETY: Will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 607 Rud der. Anyone interested in joining is encouraged to attend. PHI THETA KAPPA ALUMNI: Will hold a meeting in 402 Rudder at 7:00 p.m. New officers will be elected and members are urged to attend. LAMBDA SIGMA: Will hold a meeting in 504 Rudder at 7:00 p.m. AGGIE SCOUTS: Will hold a meeting in 137A MSC at 9:00 p.m. The Girl Scout cookie sale will be discussed and cookies will be distri buted. TAMU STAMP CLUB: Will meet in 137 MSC at 7:30 p.m. A trading session will be held. RUDDER’S RANGERS: A meeting for juniors only will be held at 7:15 p.m. in Spence Park. COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN: Will hold a meeting in 401 Rudder at 7:00 p.m. The topic will be the Special Olympics. An important message to every graduating senior regardless of field of specialization. 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Salaries and benefits are fully commensurate with education and experience. For more details on the future you’ll enjoy with one of the nation’s top ten energy companies, sign up at the placement office for an interview with our representative who will be on campus this semester. Please bring a copy of your transcript to the interview. ARCO Oil and Gas Company Division of AtlanticRichfieldCompany other nations try to answer questions on topics from mathematics to movie trivia. Texas A&M University has joined these colleges in the contest called “the varsity sport of the mind.” Ted Hoef, College Bowl program adviser at Texas A&M, said 16 teams will compete for the Texas A&M title on Feb. 4-6. Matches will run from 7-0 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center Main Lounge and the Base ment Coffeehouse. The Feb. 7 final matches will be held in 350-350A MSC, and in the MSC Ballroom, from 6:30-9:30 p.m., Hoef said. While studying at The University of Southern Illinois at Edwardsville, Hoef competed in College Bowl. He said he remembered one question in particular. “They named a few of Snow White’s dwarfs and wanted to know the ones unnamed.” Remembering dwarfs might not be a big accomplishment, but ques tions like “What is a yert? ”, show the extent of knowledge needed. “It’s kind of humbling to hear the caliber of questions they ask, ” said David Ragsdale, a graduate student in English, whose heard sample’s of the questions. Reader’s Digest helps the College Bowl Co. prepare the questions and publishes the Reader’s Digest Col lege Bowl Almanac. Hoef said the book is a good preparation source. A poll of 49 of the 64 competitors at Texas A&M showed that honor students are not the sole entrants. Both good and average students en- ter, the poll showed. College Bowl participants at Texas A&M are not in a particular major. Twenty-five students were in en gineering or science departments. The remaining 24 were liberal arts or business majors. The College Bowl is a business, even a way of life for its founder Don Reid. “I live for the College Bowl,” Reid said. In 1952 he organized College Bowl, “to create a program so people who do some thinking can get recog nition like people who catch forward passes,” he said. NBC carried the early programs until 1959. College Bowl then went on CBS, sponsored by General Elec tric. College Bowl is not sponsored by GE anymore, Reid said. “College Bowl carries itself.” Some CBS radio affiliates carry College Bowl now, Reid said. They currently are negotiating with WNET (New York PBS) and a com mercial network for television cov erage. Broadcast changes have not changed the game over the years he said, “It’s still the same game.” The game is played in 30-minute segments, said Patricia Price, MSC project chairman for College Bowl. Two teams answer questions for two seven-minute halves. The extra time is for introductions and rules before the game starts, she said. Price said that during the halves, a moderator asks two types of ques tions. Toss-up questions are worth 10 points, and the first team to answer the toss-up correctly gets a shot at a bonus question. Teams have International Meditation Society There will be a free introductory lecture on the Transcenden tal Meditation Program on Monday the 28th of January at 7:30 P.M. in Room No. 402 of Rudder Tower. This lecture is for those just interested in the general knowledge or in learning the technique for expanding awareness and increasing en joyment of all aspects of life. WHY SEARCH? Our service is FREE Apts. — Duplexs — Houses We can also help you sublease your apartment. A&M APT. PLACEMENT 2339 S. Texas, College Station “Next to the Dairy Queen’’ 693-3777 'MW / An equal opportunity employer, m/f MSC TOWN HALL PRESENTS IRA LEVIN'S DEATHTRAP Scenery by WILLIAM RITMAN Costumes by Lighting by RUTH MORLEY MARC B. WEISS Original New York Production Directed by ROBERT MOORE Restaged by PHILIP CUSACK ‘SEEING ‘DEATHTRAP' IS LIKE A RIDE ON A GOOD ROLLER-COASTER WHEN THE SCREAMS AND LAUGHS MINGLE TO FORM AN ENJOYABLE HYSTERIA!" — Jack Krotl, Newsweek Sat. Feb. 2 8 Rudder Auditorium Tickets Info. MSC Box Office Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 G.P. 4.50 5.50 6.50 Std. 2.75 4.00 5.25 only three seconds to answer toss- ups. The number of points for the bonus varies. Conferences are allowed on bonuses but not on tos- sups. With 16 teams in a double elimi nation tournament, entrants must be conditioned. Most of the competi tors are reading almanacs and thumbing through old texts. Brian Jossart, a senior in pet roleum engineering, said he was the literature and movie expert of the group. “I’ve been watching a lot of old movies lately,” he said. Any kind of specialized knowledge could carry a team past the Texas A&M tournament to compete against Rice University Feb. 11, and later at regionals in Fort Worth and national finals in Miami. The College Bowl system has sev eral different layers. Colleges like Harvard, Yale, Cornell, and David son hold similar tournaments. Davidson, a small college in New Jersey, won the national title last year and traveled to Cambridge, En gland to compete against Sydney Sussex College of Cambridge. Davidson lost in the last 10 seconds. “Anyone with half a brain has 5 chance,” Reid said. “Every one c| these people are athletes. They trait just like any other athlete.” “When southern schools were in vited, they weren’t expected to d< very well,” he said, “But Texaj teams have turned out to be gian killers.” the copy shop 201 College Main TIRED OF WORKING YOUR WAY THROUGH COLLEGE? WOULD YOU LIKE TO EARN UP TO $8500 IN YOUR LAST 12 MONTHS OF COLLEGE? 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