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Coca-Cola,® diet Coke® and cherry Coke® are registered trademarks of The Coca Cola Company. Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, November 1, 1985 Warped by Scott McCullar forrr F 100 CAM FIA/D IT IM 10UR ATO... TO TAKE rtE BACK, TACK, X ... OOPS... 801)'RE NOT JACK. I'M 50RKY, ALLEN I'M AT THE- WKOVG AfAKTMENT. ^ AUST unitor m 5 l' rnmnitilT ■mman< morel an Ex- pilot says Delta crash nearly impossible to avoid Associated Press IRVING — A former Lockheed engineering pilot said Thursday that few pilots could have pulled out of the turbulent wind conditions that contributed to the Aug. 2 crash of a Delta jet that killed 1.A7 people. But that was just one opinion in the battle of the experts in a court- room-like atmosphere at the Na tional Transportation Safety Board hearings focusing on the Delta crash. Thursday's testimony came from a parade of technical experts, some of whom disagreed over how much the pilot could have done to avoid the crash, in which the plane struck a car and a water tank before smash ing down at Dallas-Forl Worth In ternational Airport. William Smith, who retired from Lockheed last year and now is work ing for an insurance company inves tigating the crash, said. “This pilot was a very busy man” who had a vio lent ride in the windstorm. “It's highly unlikely mam pilots" could successfully pull out of the up drafts and downdrafts that plagued the plane in its final seconds, said Smith, who had a 30-year working relationship with Delta Air Lines as a Lockheed representative. But in an interview outside the hearing, Richard Bray, an aerospace engineer for the National Aeronau tics and Space Administration, char- d Smiths comment “You jin glad fcorelani Is Thu |)allas tc late Taj f VVestn em Wee ■veral n “A Jour last Fan T Standi [inner f tempted, He said . Bo acterize “purely speculative.’ , He vud that data indicates the jjMestmo 1 lot might have been able toavoidtll crash. Brav said two pullouts were both in the last six second! data showed “the aircratl would have missed the ground”iB the pilot had sustained the firslAUSI pullup. Insuranc 1 le said it was attempted whenil:B exas m ' plane \sas about 300 feel above*n he ground. kTfk Smitl), a World War 11 Navypilol^° r v ' ^ who said he had flown througn nw> r ? ri plioons. agreed it was tedm.calf en tht possible the L-1011 could haveb«H s ; uranCl pulled out of the situation. J ltion of Be new s Changing technology causing job-hopping Associated Press AUSTIN — The director of the Bureau of Business Research at the University of Texas said Thursday that today’s young people may have to change job careers three or four times to keej) up with changing tech nology. Dr. Victor Arnold addressed the Select Committee on Higher Educa tion on what committee chairman Larry Temple said was an attempt to look at where the state will he by the year 2000. “With the increased rate of tech nology change, it’s not unlikely or unrealistic to say that the young peo ple you educate today and the young f jeople you educate tomorrow as ikefy as not will have to change ca reers three or four times during their lifetime,” Arnold said. He said that a computer analyst graduate of UT-Austin could be a technological “dinosaur” two years from now. “I suggest to your graduates of to day, graduates of tomorrow will need an education that prepares them to operate and function in an international environment, an edu cation that combines the sciences with the skills and the insights of the liberal arts,” Arnold said. Dr. Kenneth Margerison, presi dent of the Texas Faculty Associa tion, urged the committee not to limit its search to only ‘‘superstar” faculty members. “Even castles in the air need a solid foundation," Margerison said in a statement. Margerison, a history professor at Southwest Texas State University, said the faculty associa tion “believes the most pressing issue concerning the quality of education is the increasing use of part-time and temporary faculty, the growing de- penclence upon a cadre of lowly paid, poorly used, and increasingly alienated faculty to teach basic courses. He urged the sjjecial committee to consider stronger support for junior colleges, remedial instruction in col leges, better teacher preparation programs, increased recruitment of women, blacks and Hispanics as fac ulty members and greater financial aid for needy and minority students. -I “This i ■bite to Student book ur awards to be t'«e lass the s given today ireer re |98f) red ■11 con from the The awards ceremony forthej Student Book Collectors’ Contesi will be held today at 2 p.m in 20 4C Sterling C. Evans Libraryll I exas A&M. Dr. Arnold Krammer, profev sor of history at fexas A&M will give a sjjeei li titled “Who Burned the Books?' at the ceremony. The 13(h Annual Student Book Collectors' Contest winners will be announced at the cere- mom af ter Krammer’s sjieech. Krammer, a rioted specialist in the history of Nazi Germany, is insura Tex the author of the recentlv-pub- lished l>ook, “Hitler’s Last Soldier in America." More than S 1.000 will lie pre sented to five students whose Ixiok collections are judged as the most outstanding among the en tries. The Friends of the Sterling C. Evans Library sponsors the con test to promote interest in the li brary among students, faculty and staff . i CORF lavy nn copter c from C spokes wr f Lt. Cn Lt. Sam aviation |ied win crashed lienei!, a iusChri FANTASTIC SALE Going Out Of Business Entire Stock 80% off Final sale days Fri. and Sat. Everything must go including an tiques, furniture and fixtures ~ fine fashions and accessories by Shala’s Culpepper Plaza 1667 S. Texas Ave. College Station 696-1148 Open 1 0-6 Daily