The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 12, 1981, Image 7

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    National
THE BATTALION Page '
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1981
Scientists say not a forgery
Elaine and George Johnson ot Houston Aggie on their way to the bonfire benefit
display a novel attempt at defining an barbecue Saturday in the Grove.
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United Press International
NEW YORK — The official
organization of repossessors —
known for taking cars, trucks and
othervehicles from insolvent driv
ers—is looking for something that
was taken from it — an advertising
blimp.
“We checked everything out,
searched everywhere and then
had to go to the police,” said Art
Christensen, a Newark, N.J., re
possessor who hosted last week’s
American Recovery Association’s
national convention.
The 4-foot by 6-foot balloon,
filled with helium and valued at
approximately $1,300, was last
seen Oct. 3 in the Grand Ballroom
of the New York Statler Hotel, he
said.
It is white with red, white and
blue fins, has a large ARA logo and
a banner saying “Repossession
Specialists.”
“It’s a little embarrassing, not
only for us but for the the Statler as
well, Christensen said. “After all
we re repossessors, and any of the
10,000 or so people from whom we
monthly repossess cars, trucks,
tractors, mobile homes, whatever,
must be having a laugh.
“It was taken from under our
noses, so to speak, so someone has
to know about it.”
ipfl!
FALL PHOTO
IS COMING
OCT. 25, 1981
COME OUT OF
YOUR SHELL!
The Thirsty Turtle
120 Walton Drive. Across from the main entrance
of Texas A&M. One half block off Texas Ave.
Open 7 days a week Sun.-Thurs. 2 to 12 —
Fri.-Sat. 2 to 1.
• Electronic Games • Pool Tables
• Dance Floor
$ 1 00 PITCHERS
WEDNESDAY NIGHT!
Shroud origin still a mystery
United Press International
NEW LONDON, Conn. —
The image of a flogged, crucified
body on the mysterious Shroud of
Turin is that of a man, but the
world may never know if it was the
burial cloth of Jesus Christ, an in
tensive scientific study has found.
A group of 45 scientists who
participated in the three-year
Shroud of Turin project and
gathered for a three-day sympo
sium to discuss the study, said Fri
day the “unique and remarkable”
image of a crucified man is not the
product of an artist or forgery.
But despite exhaustive tests,
the team of scientists has been un
able to disprove or prove conclu
sively the 14-foot long linen is the
first century burial cloth of Jesus.
The image on the shroud “has
uniqvie and remarkable three-
dimensional information encoded
in it, but the mechanism of the
image formation remains a mys
tery,” said Dr. Thomas D’Muhala,
a radiological engineer and one of
the original shroud investigators.
He said the study was con
ducted solely to determine the
physical makeup and chemistry of
the cloth and image.
The study concluded that "until
further chemical studies are made
the problem remains un
solved.”
But the scientists agreed the
shroud bears a clear, bodylength
image of a flogged, crucified man,
and has withstood exposure as a
forgery, despite intense scrutiny
under the most sophisticated sci
entific equipment.
The shroud, which first sur
faced in the 14th Century in
France, is only shown to the pub
lic a few times each century and
never leaves Italy.
The symposium will he fol
lowed by a 60-day free, public ex-;
hibition in nearby Groton of the
more than 200 photographs and
documents on the intensive tests
taken during a five-day period in,
1978.
Sophomores
Juniors
Seniors
Graduates
Earn $850 per month while going to school. Up to 24 I
months. Spend summers traveling free on govern
ment air all over the world. You’ll have enough I
money to buy a new car or rent your own apart
ment. ..
We’re looking for collegiates with a year of calculus !i
and physics to train in Nuclear Engineering. We’re |l
willing to pay you a salary of $850 per month just to I
finish college. If you have good grades and think I
you may qualify, contact us... or send a resume to: I
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Navy Nuclear Programs
Melrose Bldg., 9th floor
1121 Walker St., Houston, TX 77002
tel. (713) 224-1756 collect
Technical Majors:
i
I
tSf
U.S. Steel invites you
to check out a career
in management.
□ You’re a self-starter. U.S. Steel is a company on the move, and were
looking for people with the initiative to tackle major projects and push them
through to completion.
□ You’re a fast thinker. While the clock ticks, you may have to make
decisions involving the future of thousands of U.S. Steel people—and the in
vestment of millions of dollars.
□ You’re a team player. At a dynamic place like U.S. Steel, guiding and
motivating others is likely to be an important part of your career in
management.
Today U.S. Steel is a whole lot more
than the nation’s largest steelmaker.
We’re in chemicals, with annual
sales of over $1 billion. We’re in resource
development, ready to fill industry’s
growing needs for coal, iron ore, ura
nium and other vital materials. We build
complex structures all over the country.
We offer engineering services all over
the world. And that’s far from all.
Join us, and you’re immediately a
full-fledged member of our manage
ment team. Your opportunity for
advancement is as bright as you are.
Money is good. Fringe benefits are
liberal. And you can take advantage of
a variety of continuing personal-devel
opment programs—including tuition
refund.
Visit your placement office and
check out the openings our representa
tive plans to discuss. But don’t worry if
what interests you most happens not
to be on the list. Just write us with
your qualifications: Dave Bates, College
Relations, U.S. Steel, 600 Grant St.,
Pittsburgh, PA 15230. An equal
opportunity employer.
WORK YOUR WAY
TO THE BOTTOM.
Sometimes it’s
lonely at the bottom.
Digging deep in the
earth to extract oil from shale. Searching for
uranium deep below the snow and ice in the Arctic
Gasifying coal that lies in seams so deep and
slanted, conventional techniques can’t get it out
of the ground.
Because today, the bottom line in energy
exploration means we have to search in strange,
difficult places all over the world. Not only to
find natural gas and crude oil, but to discover
energy alternatives such as the liquefication and
gasification of coal, oil shale, and tar sands.
And uranium for
nuclear energy.
So Gulf needs
people with talent, skill, and imagination to join
in the search. Especially graduates from the
scientific/technical disciplines.
If you’d like to get to the bottom with us, see
our recruiter. Or write to:
William E. Johnston, Jr., Human Resources
Department, Gulf Oil Corporation, P.O. Box 1166,
Pittsburgh, PA 15230.
Because with Gulf, working your way to
the bottom can mean working
your way to the top.
GULF PEOPLE: ENERGY FOR TOMORROW
Oil Shale exploration, Rio Blanco, Colorado
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Gulf Oil Corporation
GULF RECRUITER ON CAMPUS:
Meet the U.S. Steel representative
on campus:
Nov. 2, 3
United States Steel
October 13, 14, 15
November 4, 5, 9, 1981
1 RACE MARK