60 $1 00 Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 11,1987 Kali of Fame FM 2818 North of Villa Maria, Bryan Thursday & Saturday 822-2222 with coupon Must be 21 years of age expires Nov. 28 j 67-year-old A&M student sets sights j on obtaining Nobel Prize for science WORDSTAR FOR THE BEGINNER BYTE BACK! One - week classes for those who want to learn this popular word processing program Nov. 16-20 Dec. 7-11 4- 6 p.m. 5- 7 p.m. r?*ake sense of computers | at the library. COST: $35.00 Evans Library LEARNING RESOURCES DEPARTMENT For more information and registration forms, go to LRD, Room 604 or contact Mel Dodd at 845-2316 By Bridget Harrow Reporter It is late, and a Texas A&M stu dent sits slumbering over a chemis try book. Music plays in the back ground — a little on the loud side — as the student works on formulas that will be on the next day’s test. The life of a typical college student? No, not really. This student is not as “typical” as he seems. Pictures of his two grandchildren are encased in a frame, and the large American flag hanging over the living room means more to him than it might for an other college student. The gray-haired, 67-year-old stu dent is Ed Moreland, ajunior meteo rology major and a World War II and Korean War veteran. After serving 22 years in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserves — several of them as a pilot — Moreland said he has come back to college to “learn to give.” “All my life I really have been doing things for Ed Moreland,” he said. “In other words, I never really felt I contributed to society. Al though I guess I did. I went out there and fought a war for every body who is in school today. I refer to it as striking a blow for democra cy.” Moreland began his college edu cation in 1985 — 45 years after he struck his first blow for democracy. He enrolled in Texas A&M at Gal veston, where he lived in a campus dorm for two years before transfer ring to the College Station campus in Spring 1987. But Moreland didn’t come to col lege without a specific goal in mind. “I read about this 91-year-old woman who keeps going back to col lege and getting different bachelor’s degrees just to satisfy her thirst for knowledge, but my goal is a little more focused,” he said. Moreland said his ultimate goal is to win the Nobel Prize. “The greatest accomplishment is going to be the day when I receive the Nobel Prize for discovering a method of steering hurricanes and the possiblity of causing hurricanes to diminish in magnitude,” he said. Moreland said he knew he would major in meteorology because he formulated his theories through his Marine experience. He went to a Marine forecaster and observer school, and forecasted weather re ports for military aircraft. He also Ed Moreland, left, studies with friend William Oestreich in Sterling C. Evans Library. managed a national weather station at a Marine base in El Toro, Calif. “That is when I figured how I could give to society and accomplish what I want to do,” Moreland said. “I want to set myself to getting my bachelor’s, then my master’s, and then I want to get into research work. Next I’ll have to massage these theories, and hopefully I can get some results from which I can write a thesis, and I’ll get my Ph.D.” “So I elected to stay in the Marine Corps.” After retiring from the Marines in 1964, Moreland flew nine years for Air America Airlines, which oper ated under clandestine conditions in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos eras. Moreland said he probably will not be alive to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for his theories, but he hopes eventually to be recognized as the person who did the research. When asked why he didn’t go to college after World War II, More land straightened up and indigna tion blazed in his eyes. Not many stu dents today have lived through the Great Depression, he said. “We had 25 percent attrition, meaning roughly 25 percent of our guys didn’t come back,” he said. “They were shot down or they crashed or whatever. It was the kind of excitement of, ‘Am I going to cheat the devil today?’ ” peers,” he advised. “Just blend: and they will accept you.” The most impressive aspect oft peers, Moreland said, is the friendship and sharing of ideas.! sharing works as a stabilizing fort that keeps him in touch withtneprt sent generation, he said. “I am not bothered at all thau peers are younger than I,” Morelan said. “I have found it a pleasure: meet and know so many of them, ft after all, they are the future leadet of our country. One of themjtii might become president of th United States." “It was very impressionable to me, and security was more important to me than going to college,” he said. Moreland said he continued to fly for Air America until he foresaw the North Vietnamese takeover of Sai gon. Although Moreland has a wealth of military adventures to recount, he prefers to give advice to both older and younger college students. “Don’t be afraid of going back to school and don’t be afraid because you happen to be older than all your Morela To younger people, gives different advice. “College is a lot of fun,” he sail “You go to college not because y« mama or papa tell you that youhau to go, or because the state said vo have to go. You go because youwaa to go. Wnen you graduate fromhij school, life is only beginning, sol sure to go to college, or you’ll missal the fun.” ^ t * c»-» t L T* T i > rliin STATUS Ol* 1 „ ---Tri ■> , >- ■ «i fiViTU J h SIA ru S OUA>I|M{„ 4 N (AP strugg to mai ument service tion o day of brance And learnir cisco E inpatie Buy a printer wi Cc I MOSC former j who criti leader’s tWednesc boss. | His de for Gorb foi Macintosh and conserve paper. AUST Bentsen, would st day, am ^eating 1 “I’ve t celebrati 7exas Strake se “I thii do that laid. A Macintosh”personal computer and an Apple ImageWriter” II uui ' printer will save you hours of time. Not to mention gallons of cor rection fluid and reams and reams of paper. And, if you buy both now, the first ream of Apple Truckload Sale Thursday December 3, 1987 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Room 226 MSC paper you’ll save will have a lovely green glow. You’ll save a bundle of cash when you pur chase an ImageWriter n printer along with your choice of a Macintosh Plus or a Macintosh SE. Eitherway you’ll be able to turn out beautifully written and beautifully printed papers. And well even try to help you pay for your purchase with a variety of financing options. We feel compelled to tell you, though,that a deal like this can’t last foreverr So it’s a good idea to see your campus microcomputer center today And join the conservation movement. # The power to be your best” Bents at a balk Capitol < He rem lote, n Capii “Thei •S. Sei hairma e said addressi lems) is that is w for Tex: MicroComputerCenter ComputerSales andSupplies Hours 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM Mon - Fri Room 123E Memorial Student Center (409) 845-4081 At hi said he in runn year. This challent Hender Council tonio la ers. Bent: 1982, s' U.S. R e Collii didate v boy) R 0 Staul terestec til 1992 Aske