The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 02, 1949, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    American Geochemists Think
Red Scientists Outdistanced
By VERN HAUGLAND
WASHINGTON — (IP) —
Russia got the jump on the
world 17 years ago in the im
portant new science of geo
chemical prospecting, but
American geochemists think
they may have caught up with
or even outdistanced the So
viet scientists in giving the
pick-and-shovel prospector a
new tool—the chemical kit.
They can’t be sure, because Rus
sia clamped a secrecy lid on geo
chemical research a year ago.
Since January 1948 no new re
ports on Soviet work of this type
have been available.
It’s all very important from a
security standpoint because the na
tion that maps its hidden ore de
posits the most thoroughly is in
the best position to use those re
sources in time of war.
The U. S. Geological Survey has
made public the translations of six
Russian papers on geochemical re
search. The most important article,
by Soviet geologist E. A. Serg
eev, summarizes Russia’s work up
to 1940 in soil analysis as a method
of prospecting for mineral ores.
Says youthful, curly-haired Her
bert E. Hawkes, director of the
Geological Survey’s two-and-a-half-
year-old project for geochemical
research:
“Our program got under way in
1946. In addition to
work, we started digging through
all the obscure little journals in
government libraries, looking for
papers on what other countries
weer doing about soil-analysis
prospecting. We found to our com
plete amazement that the Rus
sians were 14 years ahead of us.
They had started the work in
1932.”
Some phases of prospecting re
search were under way in other
countries, Hawkes says. Sweden,
for example, was making progress
on the chemical analysis of vege
tation as a clue to the soil’s com
position.
But most' of the reporting on
the subject was by the Russians.
Hawkes himself had to learn to
read Russian in order to trans
late the articles and to check the
accuracy of translations by oth
er persons.
Hawkes says at least three com
mercial companies in the United
States already are experimenting
in geochemical prospecting. The
Geological Survey project, he adds,
is “barely reaching the stage
where we are ready to give it a
whirl in the field.”
Ai
,
.
-HORSLEY ELECTED
Wendell G. Horsley, son of Wen
dell R. Horsley, director of grad
uate placements and personnel re
lations, was elected this week as
secretary of the Sigma Alpha Ep
silon fraternity chapter at the
laboratory University of Denver.
Mathews Receives
Bachelor Degree
Ward 0. Mathews of College
Station has been awarded a Bach
elor of Laws degree from Stan
ford University according to the
director of information at Stan
ford.
Mathews was one of 346 who
graduated at the end of the autumn
quarter. Graduates will receive
their diplomas in June at the reg
ular exercises.
Your com fori — and good will — come first with us!
O T
M. "Don” Donovitz, Mgr.
With new operators in charge, the LaSalle offers friendly, courteous, personal
k service to every guest. We, the management solicit your friendship and pa-
py tronage and we promise every comfort a thoroughly remodeled, modern hotel
can offer.
THE AGGIELAND ORCHES
TRA, under the direction of Bill
Turner will take part in a variety
show on the Guion Hall stage
Saturday night at 7:30. No extra
charge will be made for the show
which will be staged immediately
after the movie.
Egg Hatchability
Research Planned
(Spl)—How much folic acid (a
vitamin) is necessary to insure
hatchability of turkey eggs will be
investigated by the Agricultural
Experiment Station under a grant
of $1,300 from the Lederle Lab
oratories Division, American Cyan-
amid Co., Pearl River, N. Y.
“It has been established that
folic acid and other unidentified
new vitamins have a direct effect
on hatchability as they are neces
sary to formations of new red
blood cells,” says Dr. P. B. Pearson
dean of the graduate school and
head of the biochemistry and nutri
tion department. “Now it is neces
sary to determine quantitative fac
tors—how much is necessary to
achieve desired results.”
The research will be conducted
by Dr. Pearson and Dr. J. R.
'Couch of the poultry husbandry
department.
Luckies’ fine fobacco picks you
up when you’re low . . . calms
you down when you’re tense!
Luckies’ fine tobacco puts you on the right level—the Lucky
level—to feel your level best, do your level best.
That’s why it’s important to remember that Lucky Strike
Means Fine Tobacco—mild, ripe, light tobacco that makes a
thoroughly enjoyable smoke. No wonder more independent tobacco
experts—auctioneers, buyers and warehousemen—smoke Lucky
Strike regularly than smoke the next two leading brands combined.
Light up a Lucky! Luckies’ fine tobacco picks you up when you’re
low, calms you down when you’re tense. So get on the Lucky level
where it’s fun to be alive. Get a carton and get started today!
COPR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY
LS./MF.T—lucky Strike Meant Fine Tckacca
Harvard Business
School to Offer
55 Scholarships
A nation-wide system of region
al scholarships in the Harvard
Business School has been announc
ed by Dean Donald K. David of
Harvard University.
Purpose of the scholarships is
to insure “that well-qualified stu
dents without sufficient financial
resources will be able to continue
their education in the graduate
field of business administration.”
Five scholarships have been an
nounced for the Southwestern Re
gion which includes Arkansas,
Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma
and Texas.
The plan provides $50,000 for
scholarships to maximum of 55
men entering the school in Sep
tember. The scholars will be selec
ted by competition on a regional
basis. Each region of the country
is allotted its own scholarship.
Under the Regional Scholarship
Program, the actual amount of
the award to each scholar will de
pend directly on individual finan
cial need, David said. Selection of
men to receive the scholarship will
be made on a basis of aptitude for
business training, without regard
to financial need.
Applicants should write to the
Committee on Scholarships, Har
vard University Graduate School
of Business Administration, Mor
gan Hall, Soldier Field, Boston 63,
Massachusetts for applicat ion
forms and detailed information.
Deadline applications will be April
1, 1949.
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1949 Page 3
Britisher Searches
For Lost Atlantis
RADIO
SALE!
Now is the time
to find a
bargain in
TABLE
MODEL
RADIOS
Aggie Radio &
Appliance Center
PHONE 4-1251
North Gate
By ED L. CAMPBELL
LONDON — (IP) — If you
have $25,000—or anyTeason-
able part thereof — to spend
on a legend, here’s your
chance.
It’s a good legend. It has been
circulating around the civilized
world ever since Plato gave it
playing time on his ancient Greek
conversational circuit.
More than 6,000 books in 17 lan
guages are in print on the subject.
Artists have a picnic with the fan
tastic forms it conjures up.
It is, in brief, the legend of lost
Atlantis.
People who believe in it—they
call themselves Atlantologists—say
it was a continent about the size
and shape of Australia. It was sup
posed to have been inhabited by
a partly civilized race. Something
cosmic happened —■ the Biblical
flood is the best guess. About
9,600 B.C. Atlantis disappeared.
From there on you pays your mon
ey and you takes your choice.
Which brings us to Egerton
Sykes of London. Mr. Sykes would
like you to choose him. He says
he is going to the United States
next spring in an attempt to raise
$25,000 for a new search for At
lantis.
Sykes is a tall, loose-framed,
middle-aged Englishman with a
ready smile and a 25-year-old
yearning. He used to be in the
British diplomatic service. But
his heart is under the sea.
That’s where he thinks Atlantis
is. He has collected 1,400 books on
the subject, organized a society of
fellow believers and publishes a
bi-monthly magazine devoted to
the legend. His own qualifications
give him membership in the Royal
Geological Society. And although
the Society will not sponsor an At
lantis hunt, Sykes says he is confi
dent that if he can make the search
he will have “their silent blessing.”
He belongs to the school that
believes Atlantis was located in the
Atlantic Ocean about midway be
tween the Straits of Gibraltar and
the American continent.
The members of the Sykes School
also believe that Atlantis did not
disappear altogether in the great
deluge. The Azores, he thinks, are
what’s left of the lost continent.
First, get Syke’s picture of that
part of the ocean:
The Azores are a mountain top.
The mountain slopes downward
beneath the sea to the ocean floor.
This floor was once the plains of
Atlantis. Now it is covered with
a thick layer of mud, the accumu
lation of thousands of years. Any
thing that might have survived
there is now buried so deeply it
cannot be recovered.
But the sides of the mountain,
Sykes explains, should have kept
comparatively free of mud. So he
hopes to find on this slope the
remains of some pre-historic
town or temple. He figures that
if he goes about 15 miles off the
east coast of the Azores and
down about a mile below sea
A&M Graduate To
Inspect Texas A&I
Henry G. Owen, Jr., a 1942
Chemical Engineering graduate of
A&M, will inspect natural gas en
gineering facilities at Texas Col
lege of Arts and Industries this
week and will later visit industrial
sites in South Texas.
Owen, with other graduate fel
lows from the Institute of Gas
Technology in Chicago, will be
based at Texas A&I for more than
a week. The groiip also will visit
field installations and plants in and
near Corpus Christi, Bishop, Fre
mont, Falfurrias, Raymondville,
Weslaco, Brownsville and McAllen.
VALENTINE
SPECIAL
1 -- 8 x 10 Greytone Portrait
REGULAR $3.50 VALUE
Only
11.89
With This Ad
One special per person, two per
family. Full figures $1.00 extra
and groups extra.
A&M PHOTO SHOP
North Gate
level, he should reach the moun
tain side. If the original Atlan-
teans, as he contends, were sun
worshippers, then they should
haye built their temples on the
eastside of the mountain.
Sykes plans to do his hunting
with a camera. He would just let
down photographic equipment,
snap a few views and repeat at
intervals. He figures he would
need only the help of Mrs. Sykes,
a photographer, an engineer, an
archaeologist and a Portuguese
liaison professor.
“I don’t think it would even be
worth while wasting time asking
the British government at a time
like this to let us exchange our
pounds for hard currency to carry
out our project,” Mr. Sykes said
ruefully. But American dollars
will buy plenty of escudos. And
the way to get dollars, Mr. Sykes
is firmly convinced, is to give a
series of lectures in the United
States.
Marsh Resigns
Job With D.H.
Department
D. C. Marsh, dairy husbandry
instructor, resigned his position
with the Dairy Husbandry Depart
ment February 1 to begin opera
tion of his dairy farm in the Dal-
las-Fort Worth area.
Marsh entered A&M in 1938 ma
joring in dairy husbandry produc
tion and was a member of the A&M
Dairy Cattle Judging Team that
placed third in the intercollegiate
dairy cattle judging contest in the
National Dairy Show at San
Francisco in 1939.
He received his bachelor of
science degree here in dairy hus
bandry production in 1940 and a
master of science degree in 1947.
Marsh served five years in the
Air Force as a B-17 pilot in the
European Theater of Operations.
He returned to A&M as an instruc
tor in 1946, and has been in charge
of the breeding laboratory on the
dairy farm since September, 1947.
He has served as sponsor of the
Kream and Kow Klub and has car
ried on activities to promote the
work and interest of the club.
TOTE-A-BITE
GROCERY and FRESH MEATS
1909 So. College Road
Open 7 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
7 days each week — Holidays Included
Between Bryan and College
WE DELIVER
PHONE 2-8748
A
nnouncinff
• * • •
The same real estate service
But . • .
A NEW LOCATION
Our appreciation of your friendliness and patronage
is extended to you and an invitation for you to visit
our new offices . . .
Room 302 Varisco Building
XXvWVeVX- X&SJX KXX- ''K.WNWX.
LOUPOT’S
yfoM&tes
For
HIGH
BOOK PRICES
Ole Army
LOU
Is Stocked to the Walls With
Good Used Text Books. See
Lou Before You Buy . . .
SWiNGS *
&u/e£
At
North Gate
Visit
LOUPOT’S
TRADING POST
Trade with LOU, He’s right with you.”