Monday, March 26, 1984AThe Battalion/Page 5 ^Science-related workshops to be held this week - - ' I . 1 . r T - ' _ . . A l) XT TA 4. 1 T-J 1— . .Z M 1 IK «»-k ■ ■a «>ri 11 y-v ■*•' »-» /-I t -«r r' o I 4~» f n t Vl lAf/AT'l^C Vi /A TA 5 C O'/A 'St 1c VOll Cff*t H t] EST ORlo' By MIKE DAVIS Reporter j Careers in beer, gas and cal- blators are just a few of the Issibilities available to science- jlated majors. lAnd Anheuser-Busch Inc., pxaco Inc. and Texas Instru cts are just a few of the com- Inies that will be represented [two College of Science career Jarkshops to be held this week. [Texas Instruments, Texaco lc., Pecten International Co. and the Texas A&M Depart merit of Physics will participate in the physics workshop Tues day at 6:30 p.m. in 105 Helden- fels. The biology workshop will include Anheuser-Busch Inc., Texas Department of Health, the Stehlin Foundation for Can cer Research and Texas A&M departments of Educational Curriculumn and p.m. Wednesday in 100 Hel- denfels. Dr. Ken Poenisch, assistant to the dean of the College of Sci ence, says the college is offering the workshops to help inform people interested in careers in science-related fields. “Students need to have the opportunity to talk about career opportunities with people who Instruction,_ are out there in those various careers,” Poenisch says. Entomology, and Biology. The Each two-hour workshop will workshop is scheduled for 6:30 include five or six speakers, each giving a 10 or 15 minute speech about their field. The workshop will then be opened for questions and discussions. “We have people from busi ness and industry, from re search and academia — both higher level and secondary edu cation,” he says. “(They will) talk about what kinds of oppor tunities and what kind of train ing is need to go into those fields.” Poenisch says the workshops will offer a diverse collection of careers. “We’re taking a broad variety of different career opportuni ties,” he says. “We are not trying to focus just on teaching or just on industry because not every body is interested in those areas.” Poenisch says there is no way to include all of the career op portunities in two hours or a E articular career in 15 minutes, ut better insight, a new per spective and more information are the workshop’s goals. - “If the person doesn’t even know that that type of field ex ists, there’s no way he can pre pare himself for it,” he says. The college invited high school, undergraduate and graduate students to attend the workshops to give them the chance to talk to people who work in the “real world,” Poe nisch says. “When you invite people that are out there in the real world you get a different perspective on things,” he says. Two of the workshops were held last week for people inter ested in math, statistics and chemistry. Poenisch says though those departments are relatively small, each workshop had a good response. “I was really pleased with the presentations and the students’ response,” he says. “I don’t think things could have gone any better.” oreign builders to discuss design s ; he is u talejlts“auli lift ignore, r should ind we in *e did ai vever. ling a rrigan said ated a stain ion, w nprovem .ve approi s.m at were uu (I by the irnem of in p and » By PATRICIA FLINT Reporter Have you ever thought that alldties look alike? ^Perhaps the last time you got ost-card from a friend in Eu- e, you thought your friend’s [tel looked just like one in Dal- lChicago or Los Angeles? Three architects, from ypt, India and Mexico, are hting such monotony in ar- itecture by drawing from leir cultural roots, their heri- ;esand synthesizing this with dern building materials. But js is not easy, for as these luntries become more techno- ically advanced, their people ntto keep up with the Jones’ that is they want their cities look like Paris, Tokyo and few York. [The Rowlett Lecture Series, nsored by the College of Ar- itecture and Environmental sign brought these three n to Texas A&M Friday un der this year’s theme of region- Jsm and international culture, I to talk about their innovations iula ' n ' Bd style of designing while leges ot ^Mowing slides in conjunction iate ' with their talks, provided(■•p ie arc hitects, all interna- yranis. Wpnallv known and widely pub- uihI for ■ hed> are; Abdel Wahed El ieM Wakil of Egypt, Charles M. Cor- teachn. Ja of India and Agustin Her- n wtth Bndez Navarro of Mexico. In jvuhi.i.' jiddition Theo David, professor ' alK 1 and chairman of graduate ar- 1 ‘ ,IIC ' ■itecture at Pratt Institure and )Ster(oll ■rtner in his own architectural ,dl s y ste[ firm, gave a short talk prefacing lion. the lectures and moderating the ontinuii. K n el discussion between the [iers ant d) ree f ore ig n architects at the for te end. s whereAt the conclusion David said that Correa, El Wakil and Her nandez were all in their own way responsive to their partic ular environments, existing technologies, social needs eco nomic factors and cultural con ditions. He added later that they “understood light, exploited material and technology, ex ploited the use of color, the movements of people through space, the sense of touch and probably the sense of smell (like using a garden).” Prof, of Architecture Weston Harper and Prof, of Environ mental Design Joe Mashburn, co-chairmen of the series, sum marized the styles of the ar chitects after the lectures. Mashburn said that Hernan dez who bases his architecture on Pre-Columbian Mexico, would take “Aztec forms and pul then in steel and concrete and think it’s OK because he’s only using the forms.” Harper called Hernandez a formalist, one who beleives in “art for art’s sake”, that art would exist whether people were there to experience it or not. But El Wakil, Harper said conversely, believes architec ture has no importance as an object; its only importance is in serving people. Harper and Mashburn be lieve that Correa is the most moderate of the three. Mash burn said that Correa is respon ding mainly to the climate in his architecture, but shows an un derstanding of spatial meaning as well. “Too often architects take the easy answer based on the inter national style current in today’s magazines,” said Mashburn. But these architects make their own responses in their own ways in their own cultures, he said. Harper said that these ar chitects work with the climate rather than creating an artificial one. Egyptian architect Abdel Hamed El- Wakil, Indian architect Charles Cor rea, Theo David of the Pratt Institute, Photo by BILL HUGHES and Mexican architect Agustin Her nandez Narvarro take part in a cul ture discussion Friday. El Wakil said that it is typical practice in the third world to day to take ideas and styles from the west and reproduce them in a “terrible way” which he calls “the decadence of ideas”. He talked about the im portance of organic architec ture which blends with the envi- ronment; he considers billboards and skyscrapers eye sores. “You can see the difference between those environments and the environments that were created in the traditional socie ties,” he said. “The whole city acted as one sort of homorphus honeycomb. There wasn’t the dislocation of buildings. It looked all as one.” His work also stresses the in terflow of space which he says existed in traditional architec ture although many think it came with the modernists. Correa talked about the diffi culty in working toward better conditions for the poor without resorting to the international style that causes cities to look al ike. “The people’s aspirations, what they really want, the mythic dream of the big city Bombay — the buildings are ugly, but to these squatters, to these construction workers, it’s a world they will never enter which they want to enter,” he said. He told the story of when the first hippies (from Europe) came to India and layed on the streets looking spaced out, lice in their hair. The rich Indians objected, he said, and wanted them thrown out. Correa said he couldn’t understand this when so many Indians were lay ing on the streets in the same condition. Until, he said, one day a friend told him, “Don’t your re alize that if you’re a rich Indian traveling in your cities and you see a hippie, the hippie is signil- ing to you. He’ saying, T am coming from where you’re going — it’s not worth going there,”’ Hernandez stressed the mys- tecism and spirtuality of his work and his culture. “The creation of architecture is the capacity for syntheses and abstraction of our heritage . . he said. Hernandez said that being able to adapt these forms and symbols to the necessities of the present and project them into the future is of vital importance in architectural design. M#- JOGA ecPrison reformers a n 'otea nee ag t o be fii® icil , polling!* iay be delegates lyersaiw „ down United Press International AUSTIN — A Texas prison reform group Saturday boned up on the delegate selection ‘ocess for the Democratic and ipublican parties in hopes of mvincing the state and na- mal conventions to take a mce against the death pen- Members of the Austin-based Citizens United for Rehabilita tion for Errants went through the step-by-step process by which Texas voters become del egates to the county, state and national party conventions. Director Charles Sullivan said if CURE members can be come delegates there is a possi bility ot having an anti-death penalty resolution at least de bated at the state and national" level. “We felt it would be a very good opportunity to do some thing about an issue we feel strongly about,” he said. But CURE member Ruth El- linger cautioned members they must do their homework prior to the May 5 precinct caucuses where delegates will register for presidential candidates and consider resolutions. “It’s going to be difficult to get anybody’s attention beyond that (presidential politics),” she said. “You need to organize ahead of time.” MSC Cepheid Variable presents AGGIECON 15 March 29 - April 1 The Largest Science Fiction And Fantasy Convention In the Southwest Authors * Artists * Dealer’s Room Art Show * Banquet * Auction Masquerade * NASA * Excitement Action * Danger * Romance Movies: Dragonslayor, Blade Runner, Allegro non Troppo, many more ! Didn’t you know that if you’re a senior with the promise of a $10,000 career ^oriented job, you could have the American Express®Card? Where have you been? Asleep? Because for some time American Express has been saying that we believe in your future. But even more than that. We believe in you now. And we’ve been proving it. A $10,000 job. 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