First Presbyterian Church 1100 Carter Creek Parkway, Bryan 823-8073 Dr. Robert Leslie, Pastor Rev. John McGarey, Associate Pastor SUNDAY: Worship at 8:30AM & 11:00AM Church School at 9:30AM College Class at 9:30AM I Bus from TAMU Kmeger/Dunn 9:10AM Northgate 9:15AMI/ Jr. and Sr. High Youth Meeting at 5:00 p.m. Nursery: All Events Page 4/The BattalionAThursday, October 3, 1985 •Manicures •Pedicures •Sculptures •Tips •Refills •Nail Jewelry Sculptured Nails $35 00 New Tanning Bed $6 5<) 30 min. Hours 8:30-5:30 Tues.-Fri. 846-0292 3731 E. 29th St. Bryan Town & Country Center Top of the Tower Texas A&M University Pleasant Dining - Great Vieiv SER VINO L UN CHE ON B UFFE T 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday $5.25 plus tax t Open each Home Football Game 1 1:()() A.M. till game time Serving soup & sandwich 11:00 A.M. — 1:30 P.M. Monday — Friday $2.75 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” Electronics may make books obsolete Humanities adjusting to computers By CHRISTI DAUGHERTY Reporter Sometime in the near future en tire libraries will be stored on disks instead of in books, and students will learn almost entirely from com puters, Dr. Joseph Raben said Wednesday. Raben, a former professor eme ritus at Queens University in New York and a founding editor of such publications as “Computers and the Social Sciences” and “Computers and Translation”, spoke about the use of computers in the fields of humanities. The presentation was sponsored by Sterling C. Evans Library, the College of Liberal Arts and the computer science department. Raben, who had first researched the possibility of using computers for humanities work in the 1960s, said that at the time computers were enormous and difficult to use. In fact, use was restricted almost entirely to mathematicians and computer scientists, he said. “There were all kinds of compli cations involved in using computers then that seemed calculated to con firm the strong belief that human ists had nothing to do with compu ters,” Raben said. Even the idea of putting words into computers seemed far-fetched at that time, he said, but since then, the idea of computers and humani ties working together has become much less outlandish. The micro computer has made it all more probable. “I am personally convinced that the microcomputer revolution may be the most important event in the “I am personally convinced that the microcomputer revolution may be the most important event in the his tory of the human species. ” — Author Dr. Joseph Raben man lieing years to restart;j outer can discover in i lien said. Besides helping speedt search process, compm much more information J average person could read;] tirn** he said. history of the human species,” he said. The changes that have occurred since the invention of the micro computer are just an indication of changes that will radically alter the way people live, Raben said. Books, for instance, have become outdated, he said. They are too del icate and too scarce a commodity for the uses for which they are needed. and micro-chips, is not touched by human hands and is not in that way destroyable,” he said. A library can only have a certain number of books on hand, yet there are unlimited numbers of people who need them. Instead of getting only the infor mation that other humans consider important through sources such as encyclopedias, people can get all the information in existence on a certain subject, Raben said. Then they can decide what is important to them. Thus, human error is less possible. “1 believe that discs art j continue to get larger i Raben said. Thelastr tion 1 heard was 2.51 of information on one opt However, he said.t only will influence how* also how we learn. at Information changes very quickly, Raben added, and books become obsolete in short amounts of time because their very nature makes it difficult to alter them to keep up with the times. “A librarian told me that books which are needed for a certain class may be checked out a hundred times in a semester,” he said. “By the end of that semester the book has literally been worn to pieces.” He emphasized that he doesn’t suggest people sit in front of a com puter each time they want to read a book, or that they take the com puter on vacation with them to read while lying on the beach. Instead, he said, this advance ment would help researchers or people who have a particular inter est in literature or history. Raben said that com give students the indivi tion that a classroom sin allow. Already studenisa ing a great deal fromthtitj ers. “Students are sayingi can teach themselves fas at a terminal thantheya class,” lie said. i himaij The solution to these problems is to have all the books people could possibly need on a computer, Ra- oen said. “The actual computer, the wires Raben said he used computers in this way when researching the in fluences of writers upon other writ ers. “I wanted to know how often and where Milton’s name was men tioned within 10 or 20 words of Shelley’s name,” he said. If a student learns! computer will teach I level. If he learns moreq computer will teach speed. This is virtually i m a class of 30 people, v taught at the same |u«| said. iNGULS day is at the IXAS p.m. i iATIO 7:3 SU3 meet iA A of Ca; >FF CA to go SGIOl neerii about fGRICl split t own f: ISC Cl at 7:3 )ATA will hi house requii jTAMU 1 ImPY a it §: l K, A. p.m. i What would take the average hu- 1 he use of computer certainfy after the way lives and learns, he said, involved in humanititesv leave their old prejudice computers behind, and inevitable. AC Rudd On St IVENEZI >.m, i SR*' at 7 p. SHINA 7 p.m. City hall moved into train depot NC Associated Press PANHANDLE — When residents in this historic Texas Panhandle rail road town learned the Santa Fe rail road planned to do away with its old depot here, they asked to be allowed to give the building a new lease on life. Several possiblities were consid ered for the maroon brick building that had played a major part in the town’s growth. “The museum was interested in it,” City Manager Larry Gilley says. “We were also thinking about mov ing city hall. It was small, and we needed more room. The current city hall at that time was about half the size of the train depot.” After mulling over the possibility of making the old depot into city hall, Panhandle city officials ap proached the company. “Santa Fe leased the building to us on an annual non-billable lease,” Gil ley said. “It’s still their property, but company officials said they had no future need for it.” The depot had a long history in this town. Trains stopped here in the early part of the century to deliver supplies for the nearby boom town of Borger, where the goods were transferred by vehicles or horse- drawn wagons. Eventually Santa Fe put a station in Borger, and the need for the one in Panhandle decreased. But the decision was finally made to close the depot, and Santa Fe filed tn the Texas Railroad a request witr Commission to do away with it. When city officials in Panhandle received a copy of the official notifi cation, they began to consider what could be done to save the building. So the work began to change an old-time train depot into a city hall that could fit the needs of a modern, bustling town but still keep the fla vor of the original building. It be came a $26,000 renovation project, a figure which does not include air conditioning. Yell pra< at the Grc m ■ Two yell practices will to get students geared up Texas A&M-Texas ltd) Saturday. Students who can't game in Lubbock can their support for the team by attending yell 7 p.m. tonight attneGi Midnight yell practice»:j held in Buddy Holly Parlui bock Friday, located on ik side of the univenity. To there, take the utuvem f rom Loop 289. Lessoi MSC. fAMUC 410 Cl 6:15 p 1986 Ml tions a JJBBOt urday It will Jones : Grove By FI Yne'leader dent Associai A STATE OF MIND... A spirit of teamwork ... a drive to achieve ... a talent for discovery. We thrive on meeting the tough energy demands of a changing world. We help our people discover their energies with challenging problems, diverse assignments, high mobility and visibility, and salary and benefits among the best in the industry. That's the Chevron State of Mind ... searching, energetic, progressive. It's resulted in an impressive list of accomplishments over our one-hundred-year history. We were among the first private companies to recognize the potential of the digital computer to solve complex industry problems. Today, with the acquisition of Gulf, we are one of the heaviest users of computers in the world. Our central ized operation includes two state-of-the-art data centers plus a sophisticated communications network to tie us together globally. If you are graduating in the area of computer science, business administration or engineering, and want to apply information science to problems in finance, logistics, marketing, refining, systems soft ware and data communications, we invite you to join us. Working together, we plan to maintain a standard of excellence unsurpassed among energy corporations. The Chevron State of Mind ... it's the state of the art in the energy and the computer business. Become a part of it. Sign up for an on-campus inter view or write: Manager, Pro fessional Employment, Chevron Corporation, P.O. Box 7137, San Francisco, California 94120-7137. students can government in issues affec "Right nov involved in, maybe securi ant code lav president of litical science “And sure, tl everybody as But if you’re water plan is heart because ited resource your life. "If you are happened to now-bankru plexes, you k to just lose th as a security d Hatch was head the TSS ganization as work which w ernments of i colleges acros them abreast fecting studer *Sizzlin *Chicke ...YOUVE BEEN WORKING TOWARD Fajit, Taco Chicl CHEVRON RECRUITERS WILL VISIT THIS CAMPUS Thursday, October 3-Friday, October 4 Chevron An Equal Opportunity Employer Compl 1315 S. C -'fTPT