The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 30, 1948, Image 4

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j Hall, March
Jensen, Hi
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ers at!
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Dr. Fred W. Jefisem
and Dr, C. K. Hancock ‘ ^
■een and radio.
? the chemlstrjr department,
professor ojf organic chem-
southwest
id
:ia
t the southwest rbgjlonal meeting
| i istry, Will present pftpe*a»
of the American Chemi^l 8oci|Jty to be held ijii Shreveport,
Louisiana, on December 10-11.{I j
j During the sympositgh bn ‘‘.The Training (|f a Chemist,”
Dr. Jensen will discuss; “Graduate
Training for the Mast
ng l
In his discussion he wil!
^ r m
philosophy of graduate-trai
. the masters level which 3i
course requirements, rem^
to be fulfilled outside tni
ment-of chemistry, credit fcqjur re
quirements, and research require-
menf. , '
Dr. Jansen is one of six i|j;ieiii-
I tiate who have been nominated <<>
receive the Southwest; RMioiqd
Award of the American Q^pioal:
Society to he. preaenUld ti e.
Shreveport meeting. Thi« ttwird is
presented annually to a «mnUt
o? chemical engineer o^ th||Mutn»
west for outstanding cdiUidlratiotU
to th« ohemlca) pronilmiiiini si|i-
enea of ('heniistiy, ami; fchp-
cal industries. Toe awivid
of an ongraveil hronau/pl
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•RAND t
SKI RAJA
1." J'*
B.V.D’s wonderful Ski nf J
jamat are soft, snug, warm
.tailored to fit comfort*
•lily ho matter how. iotj (
toss and turn Z yk
•lopp! They si ndch tfwt;
ybu—thcre’s pkniy^f
give. They're a rimifi
Wttih-nev(ir nerd inhihiK
ho Imttoui to hrciik or
get lost. Go to siftp ilia
pirf df'rciilly winu; $ki
r«j««u lonl|hll .j#:
CLOCME
li!»
V|
CoUege and Bry|| :
. r t
&
2P0 in cash.'
! Dr. Hancock
I
im xm. „ ill present three
papers. One o: these papers is
“The Correiat oh between the
^Molecular' Silic i-Sesquioxide'Ra-
lio of Soil (Colloids and the
Roadbed Ter£»rBiance of the
||Corresponding Seils.”; He wdl
discuss the use of chemical prop-
[erties of soils o supplement the
use of physiejal ■. properties in
Evaluating sbth as highway base
linaterials. !
'p 1 ? ' S !' r..
jj His second pa icr is entitled "An
" " i Edi
hetnistry f
fji this draper, itin index of formhl
i titication iiualifjcwjtions is present-
hi, and usp of j tlio index is dib-
umwI as #PP led to eompHring
(hmnlilnitivttly ti e educnjtiopal quid-
‘irations of coridspon^inf faeiil-
,eH of dlfffrjint ceflegeC, or as ah-
UUUntltatlvely
Index of F'(>nnu| Education Quali
fications of a Chemistry Faculty*"
[lied to eywlua in
a trend In sue
Minglit fneiiilty
0 trend in sue t ipiulocation* fpr
. . ■ ,, . ■ ri : • 1 ■ : ; V T; ■
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^ Dr. F..weiler To Head
‘ !■
Texas Forest Service
. 4 r, o . II ' »• xr * u li jj
Welfare Group
Names Russell
President
Daniel Russel, professor of
rurlil liociology at ARM ihaa
been named president of th«
Texas Social Welfare Aaaocia*
lion Conference. The
group
aiwiHico vne cuiuarvucc, inciuuiiif
sevan rtprusenUtivM from tha Ag-
ritrtHlirEconomics and Sociolo
gy Dapartmenta at AAR/About
700 paoplf attended- the confer.
" Some of the put*
a of the confer
ence
The Behan
Join in Welf,
was “Cl
fare Problems." S
standing addresse:
wore: 1 ih'.
ooi and Community
Ware Planning to
Strengthen Family Life," bv Dr.
L. D. Haskew, dean of the
School of Education, University
of Texas and “Qtixea Participa
tion in Community Welfare
Planning," by Dr. Leonard W.
Mayo, vice-president of Western
Reserve University.
Another was “The Church’s Role
in the Social Order,” by Pr, John
Barclay, pastor of the Central
Christian Church, Austin.
Affiliated groups coo jpereted
with the Texas [Social Welfare As-
socintioh in promoting the confer-
en<!«. These were the State Com
mittee for Children and Youth,
Texas Conference on Family Re
lations, ! Texas Extension Service,
Texas Probation Association. Ame
rican Red Cross, League of Women
Voters, and the Salvation Army.
The Corps of officers were all
re-elected at the end of the con
ference- ; .
r
♦ Dr. A. D. Folweiler pf Natch
itoches, Louisiana, hot accepted
appointment as directoi of the
Texas Forest Service.
He wae appointed by Gibb Gil
christ, chancellor of the A&M Sys
tem to fill the position as he»d
of the statewide system's forest
activities by the resignation of
W. E. White l*Mach 1948. Action
was taksn at a, meeting of the
board of directors at thgir moat
ing jn Austin last week.
Folweiler's excellent eduo*
lional background and hU well
rounded experience in nil phases
mil Industry,
wttijfor lead-
♦try pro-
Former Student Is
Asigntd to Japan
1 Major Richard] D. Vitok, Class
of '88, recently arrived in Japan
i Dr, llamwi'k's ihird pajier will
be presented at lilt* alumni break*
fast which will M held Saturday
morning, DrcenhEr Hi, The title
ink Ibis paper laj "Unique All*
Hwers in ('nemintjry."
Dr. Humtoek'i lu>bhy since high
chool days hu j been the collee-
iop of odd Bitjualions, humorous
using a
ncidents, and ar iu*ing answers en
ountered jp jehc mfetry. In this isa-
ie.r, selected itein^ k 1 * 0 ! 1 humor
U’ili be presented.;
John Kehpdy Dies
On Mexican Visit
CORPUS CH|RIBTI, Tex., Noy.
[;jOj LP)—John G.j Kenedy, Jr., own
er of the ‘10( ,0{)0-acre Kenqdy
iliamch, died ir Saltillo, Mexico,
karly today, friiiniL Hepre were in-
jfotfmed.
Kehedy and 1 is (wife were on a
Vacation in Mexico during the
thanksgiving h diiay.
, Kenedy was i graduate of Tex
as A&M Gollegp Snd was a com-
nissioner of
i|oundation. Of
e led a quiet 1
or his extensiv;
he Catholic chi
it Knight of the
His wife is
$Uess of Saltil
Iteirg miin lived
glacial period,
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Jci
! Wo
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tile; A&M research
a ‘retiring nature,
fefand was known
hilanthropieE to
i. He was made
der of . St. Gtcg-
? the Great tvfo (years ago by the
Pe. I
I former Elena
Anthifopologislts, believe Heidel-t
i it the second inter-
flrobahly 250,000
and was assigned to the 40th
Fighter Wing.;
Major Vitek reoeived his com
mission at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, in
ItM, Hi* was alerted tostbe Far
Kaat Air Force whits attached to
the Harvard Buslnesa School.
Currently assigned as air OOmp-
lroller offiew at Misawa Air Foie*
Rase, Major Vitok Is a member of
the Fifth Air Force.
Me Is the son of Mrs. Vlesla VI-
tolFof Fort Worth'and the husband
of Virginia M. Vitek of Bmlthvillo,
Texas. ■ if
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2 Former Students
Gjo on Active Duty
(Jlen L. Bell, Class of ’48, and
Edward. O. McDonald, Class- of ’31,
re-entered the Army recently for
a three-year tour of extended ac-
itiVI duty.
McDonald, a captain in the Ord-
naqce Department, |is stationed at
Fort Bli^, 'f’exas. During the war,
he Served in Iran as a maintenance
officer. He resides With his moth
er, Mrs. E. B. McDonald, in Jef-
ferion, Texas,
Bell, a second lieutenant in the
Field Artillery, is stationed with
the: Second Infantry Division, Fort
Ldwis, Washington. His home is
Pineland,; Texas.
’48 A&M Graduate
Begins Army Duty
Fred Li Hughes, a 1948 grad
uate of A&M, will enter the Army
Wednesday for a three-year tour
of extended active duty. He will be
stationed with the 10th Mountain
Infantry Division at Fort Riley,
Kansas. i
Lieutenant Hughes, a native of
Merkel, Texas, resides with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. j Fred C.
Hughes, in Abilene. |
RADIATOR TROUBLE ? ? ?
El f ciept One Day Service
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10Q N. Pi Tier
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I jJk
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I.Tryd
Dishman Pontiac Co.
rfriat* tlrtron DU-
H Bryaill
Phone 2-1685
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of foraatry, teaching
fit him particularly
orahip in tha broad
which w* arc
>r Gilchrist
lintmant. ’ [
foraatry
iaUgral part of
lowuars and
Uw ■tat«,” ha
will work in even
alien with other part* ; of die
system engaged in research and
extension." i
A native oi Pennsylvania,
new Forest Service head took
Bachelor of Science in Forestry) at
Pennsylvania State College
1925, his Master of Forestry] at
Yale University in 1934 and his
D - -
no
of Wisconsin in 1943, jj.
ith the New Jersey State For
est Service from 1925-28, he work
ed in forest land acquisition, ad
ministration and fire control. In
1928 he joined the North Carolina
State Forest Service in the fire
prevention and control division.
In 1931 he was placed in
chkrge of the Information and
Education branch of the Florida
to Forest Service, and later
me director of the CCC
camps in that state administered
by| the forest service.
|e joined. the faculty of Ldui-
siapa State University in 1934,
serving as an associate professor
tor of Philosophy in Land Eco-
and Soils at the University
Tf
N
of forestry and engaging in for
estry foy the Louisiana Agricul
tural Experiment Station. In 1946
he joined the International Paper
Company, admiiniatering ail of
their forest lands in Louisiana.
__During World War |l Dr.
Folweiler was in the military
government hrgnch of the Army,
serving with Engineer! Head
quarters of the European The
atre of Operationa and with En-
ginoers Headquarters of I'ntton’s
Third Army.
Ilti is Urn author of a text book
on Flro Prevention and Control
which la the staminrd [fife text in
all but three cotlcgea of the United
Status when* forestry degress are
granted, us well as of numerous
scientific bulletins and articles.
Dr. Rkefill
Jj [Ml . ' !;.
Discuss Atomic
Fiel d Monday
Dr. Sumner T; Pikje of the
Atomic Energy Corhmission
will discuss “Problems in the
Field of (Atomic Energy”
here December 6. Thfe lecture
will be given In the Physics
Lecture Room at 8 p.m.
, Dr. Pike is one of five mgmbers
appointed by the President to the
Atomic Energy Commission. He is
a member of. the American Asso
ciation of Petroleum Geologists,
American Statistical A 50K *-'* a ti9 n >
and American Geological Society.
In addition to: experience in the
fields of engineering, business, and
economics, Dr, Pike was vice-presi
dent of the Equipment Sales Com
pany in Dallas. From 1923 to 1928
he was financial employee and
V\v
,ifc| /.iLl.
Tr
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J.l: * A .1 M . .1
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!. • i| i ' ! i.
secretary
suranct* Company, and from 1928
to 1938 he wase vice-president and
director of the Case, Pomeroy, and
Company in New York.
He has served ay advisor to the
U. | S. : Secretary of Commerce, beeh
a member of the National Eco
nomic Committee, and was director
of the Fuel Price Division of the
OPA.
j . " L.' / : j
"Silnce atomic energy is given
top priority, both nationally and
internationally,” Dr. P. B. Pear-
sun, dean of the Graduate School,
said, “the lecture should be of in-
tcrest to everyone.”
The? lecture is sponsored joint
ly by J the Graduate School and by
the) Sigma Xi.club.
At; ENGINEER ADDRESSES
DALLAS CLUB MONDAY
Wiljiam S. Allen, extension ag
ricultural engineer, spoke to the
Dallas Agricultural Club Monday
at the Jefferson Hotel.
His: subject.was “Modern Barns
for; Present-Day Agriculture.” 7
is Named
’49 President
Of Local AAUP
^orman F. Rode, professor of
electridil, engineering, waq «tet-ted.
pixjsident of thie local chapter of
hfej American ^ssociatidniOt Uni
mlem
aid
S
, 'I j p |f]
Approximately 15 0
mmkejup thgi local chapt
ibg several piaddh i stud
wife oligiblelfor Junior
slips.;. . ■ %
llAny persoi WltK ja teilchitg or
earch posftion‘\fith the ra ik of
acmvdi-
vtis^ty Professors for the; 1949
school year at a meeting last week!
Dr. M. S. Brooks of the Rural
Sociology Depariment waS elected
vice president/ j
Dr. E. M- Hildebrand (df the
£
Ptynt Physiology and Pathology
lartment waa elected sqcriBtary-
isurer. The local chapter meets
e a month during the! Regular
school year. ■ j; • ’]•''•
Turpose ofi i jthe Associgtioh is
siiiiilar to the functions; bf -the
American Bar Association [and'the
American Medical Association, l j
The association was organised in-
of highfiy algn
- now;’ha» nor* than
?r* in 170 acuvdl
i vers Hies thhmghmiit’ tho’U. 1
iflktl
instructor oflkigber in af
tod iristitutiqiFmhk^s a p^rssh eli-
'gfelo for meiibersljp.
sm.3«. a
Picturi |Tifne Sdt
Fof Marshall Club
illr
"CHESTERHED is ,
ligowtts | smoke in
b ntW Ubm,
*,N INNOCENT AFFAII
nlwoys enjoy tboir
IIIDER, BEHER TAS1
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members
aptet; it clud-
snti who
me’mbor-
ill ! A&M Club
p.m. Wednesday in t
(>mitorj| 10, accorii
migst, clib ire mrtet
oriiii picture (taken
in the lounge
o A.
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The Mai'S:
have its
8 fym,
Dormlto
Hfliigst
Those wishing tm
plctui’e are)feqtte|l „
Bobby Ellis or Cfiaries B
r6 that tiifl?.
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■ft <
reporter.
in tjie irbup
htiact
n -he-;'
1; tic -
.i-#
will.
-O' u
*
i'
Hi MY dgontte."
STARRING IN
AN INNOCENT AFFAI
A UNITED artists release
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