The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Friday, January 16, 1959 FACE 3 yn< , A 2.7 764 D SOCIAL WHIRL — Argentinian Joins Staff Luig Capurro right, research scientist from Above, the internationally known scientist Buenos Aires, Argentina, has joined the De partment of Oceanography and Meteorology to analyze oceanographic data collected dur ing the International Geophysical year. checks an oceanographic chart with Dr. Hugh McLellan, Canadian research scien tist at A&M. To Make IGY Study Argentinan Scientist Joins A&M Oceanography Staff An internationally-known scien tist from Argentina has joined the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology, Dr. Dale Leipper, head of the department, said yes terday. Luis Capurro of Buenos Aires Will analyze the oceanographic data collected during the Interna tional Geophysical Year and will coordinate this work with research programs being caried out by the department for the Office of Naval Research through the A&M Re search Foundation. A regular Naval officer and a veteran of numerous scientific ex peditions, Capurro was one of the small group of scientists who gath ered in Rome in 1954 and initiated plans for the International Geo physical Year, a tremendous, worldwide scientific study involv ing more than 8,000 scientists from 65 countries. The new research scientist is a 39-year old native of Buenos Aires who is on leave of absence from the Argentine Navy. He has been in the Navy for 23 years and holds the rank of commander. Capurro graduated from the Ar gentine Naval School in 1940 and the Postgraduate Naval School in 1945. He spent three years in the United States and received a Mas ter of Science degree in ocean ography from Scripps Institution in California in 1949. Since 1949, Capurro has been active in research and teaching. He has commanded a number of oceanographic vessels, served three years as chief of the Depai'tment '. : f '% Dr. W. B. Davis . . finds rare bird Davis Does Mexican Study Over Holidays Dr. W. B. Davis, head of the Department of Wildlife Manage ment, spent the last nine days of December in the Sierra Madre del Sur of the Mexican state of Guer rero continuing a study of the birds and mammals of that area which was begun in 1951. Among the more than 100 speci mens he brought back for deposit in the Texas Cooperative Wildlife Collection is a large swallow-tailed ewift which was previously known from Mexico only in the area bor dering on Guatemala. The collection contained several species of fruit eating bats. He and other members of the Departnient of Wildlife Manage ment have published several ar ticles on the birds, mammals, rep tiles and amphibians of Mexico. During his years of research in Mexico, Davis, who works with close cooperation of the Mexican Department of Forestry and Game, has discovered about a dozen new species or sub-species of vertebrate animals. Clearance Sale At LEON WEISS DRASTIC REDUCTIONS LEON WEISS CO. Next To Campus Theatre VI 6-4413 105 Boyett of Oceanography of the Argentine Hydrographic Service, and was a professor of oceanogi-aphy at the University of Buenos Aires and the School for Postgraduate Naval Of ficers. In 1957-58, Capurro was the commanding officer of the Argen tine icebreaker, San Martin, on a scientific expedition to the Antarc tica. He was chief of the staff at the Argentine Antarctic Task Group. Among the scientists on the vessel San Martin was Guy Fran- ceschini, A&M assistant professor of oceanography and meteorology. Capurro is active in several in ternational organizations. He is a member of the Special Committee on Oceanic Research for the In ternational Council of Scientific Unions and is on the advisory committee on marine sciences of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organiza tion. He is also a ihember of the American Geophysical Union, the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics and the Pan Amer ican Institute of Geography and History. Capurro, who represented Ar gentina at last summer’s meeting of scientists in Moscow, is the author of several scientific publi cations and is the author of a text book entitled “Chemistry of Sea Water.” He and his wife and their 10- year-old son, Luis, and his wife’s mother are now making their home in Bryan, at 2217 Truman. American Veterinary Medicine Assn. Wives Society held a meeting Wednesday night in the Social Room of the Memorial Student Center and elected new officers. New officers are Sammie How ard, president; Helen Fear, vice president; Lourez Royall, parlia mentarian; Marlene Oliver, secre tary; Doris Schroeder, correspond ing secretary; Joan Ford, reporter; and Joan Still, representative to the Aggie Wives’ Council. * * * Electrical Engineering Wives Club will meet Monday night at 8 in the Brooks Room, YMCA. * .-{e .-J: Plant Physiology and Pathology Wives Club will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the Brooks Room, YMCA. * * * Business Administration Wives Club will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the Cushion Room, YMCA. * * * Aero Wives Club met last Sat urday night and installed their new officers for 1959. The new officer’s are Ann Reu ter, president; Beverly Niss, first vice president; Jane Tidell, second vice president; Johnnie Jordon, secretary; Peggy Jordon, corres ponding secretary; Gene Mount, treasurer; Shirley Johnson, report er; and Marilyn Herbert, council reporter. Agricultural Economics and Ru ral Sociology Wives Club will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the So cial Room of the Memorial Stu dent Center. W. R. Carmichael will speak on “Child Psychology.” ♦ * Handicraft and rug Group of the A&M Social Club will meet Tuesday morning at 9:30 in the home of Mrs. P. W. Burns, 1009 Walton Drive with Mrs. J. D. Pre witt as co-hostess. * * * Brazos County A&M Mothers Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 1 in the Recreation Room of the A&M Presbyterian Church for a covered dish luncheon. Alaskans Given Texas-Made Flag WASHINGTON UP) — Alaskans Tuesday were given a hand cro cheted 49-star flag—the handi work of a Texas women living on the U. S.-Mexican border. It was presented to Sen. E. L. Bartlett D-Alaska by Rep. Joe Kilgore D-Tex. on behalf of the Harlingen, Tex., Chamber of Com merce. The flag was crocheted by Mrs. Elizabeth Biddison Strong of Harlingen’s neighboring town of Lozano, its 34,846 stitches repre senting 70 hours of work. 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