Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 20, 1962 THE BATTALION < *1 ^ . : ■ ' ,.; ■; ■■■ ■ . ■■ v.- ■ . ■; ;i '■ ■■■'V'v .. 'I' : ' . ■''' . • / '■ . Girls, Dance, Yells Promised In Austin 1 Wr;£ ::] 'v I ■I : m \ Freshmen shoulder another L stacking - area to be placed on the second stack late Monday afternoon. Logs were 1, 2, 3 Heave into the moved in near the stack from the unloading areas where two cranes lifted them into position around the center pole. A Corps Trip dance Wednesday ight from 8:30-12:30 in the new ustin Municipal Auditorium will >e sponsored by the Austin A&M Mothers’ Club, according to John A. Hedrick, president of the Aus tin Hometown Club. “We will have girls for Aggies vho do not have dates,” Mrs. B. H. Jalfour of the Austin Mothers’ Club wrote Hedrick. She said the lirls would be from the high ichools in Austin and from the Jniversity of Texas. A midnight ^ yell practice is scheduled during the dance. The “Jets” from Charlie’s Play house in Austin will furnish the music. Refreshments will be sold at the dance. Tickets for the dance are j stag or drag according to Hedrick I They may be purchased at a boot! ! in the Memorial Student Cente outside the gift shop. The Austin Municipal Auditor ium is located one block south of the Colorado River and three block, west of S. Congress Ave. Engineer From GE Speaks Next Week E. L. Misegades, manager of sup porting engineering operations at General Electric’s plant in Tyler, will speak here next Tuesday tc the Texas Society of Professional Engineers. ARRIVALS! The Following Technical Reference, Juveniles and Quality Paperback Books Have Arrived In The Exchange Store Within The Past Few Days. We Cordially Invite You To Come In and Browse. 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Names for Every Child Brown—Drama Bravery—Successful Wine Making at Home Lasser—The Arco 1963 Income Tax Guide Gamow—The Atom & Its Nucleus .95 .95 .95 .95 1.00 1.95 Mathey—The Impressionists 2.95 IF ITS IN PRINT WE HAVE IT OR WE WILL GET IT FOR YOU. The Exchange Store ‘Serving Texas Aggies' Up, Up And Away John Hedrick, C-2 senior from Austin, ascends to begin work on the second stack early Monday afternoon. A safe ride for Hedrick depended on the experienced hands of Toti Ransdell, F-l junior from San Antonio, who was attlif controls of the crane. SPEAKS HERE USD A Agent Calls For Pesticide Usi 1 " V > , . - -' . e ' . I Pdsticides pre absolutely essent ial today to maintain: quantity and quality of food and fiber and to protect public health, Si A. Hall, a U. S. Department of Agriculture official, said here Monday. Hall of Beltsville, Md., is chief of the. Pesticide Chemicals Re search Branch of the USDA’s En tomology Research Division. Speaking at the Insect and Plant Disease Control Conference here, he said pesticides will be needed for years to come despite the prob lems they cause. Two major problems are insect resistance and insecticide residue^ on food and feed he said. Shifting to other types of pesticides will answer some of the puzzles in both these categories, as well as prob lems involving wildlife losses. “Biological control methods in general cannot take the place of pesticides tomorrow or next year — perhaps not for decades,” he said. “But there will surely and. slowly be real gains in these other approaches in proportion to work that is done in exploring them.” OUTSTANDING examples of biological control programs are underway in Florida and Texas. Male Screwworm flies are steriliz ed through nuclear radiation and then released over wide areas. The sterile males mate with non female flies,- but no young i produced. Hall praised the trend tow eradication of certain import pests rather than year-to-year to trol. “We thus find ourselves io situation where great progress been made, where we are straj ling to consolidate this prod and to clean up problems that to come with it. We are onthei# with new types of research keyi to basic studies in biology 0 chemistry. If we were not on I move, our progress . would suit be cancelled out by the dynaii forces of nature,” he said. Another speaker on the ffi day’s program was Norman Fi ter, chief chemist for the and Drug Administration at Di las, who said Texas farmers i getting and using pesticide aivi “THEY MUST be doing the) right because the FDA did noth it necessary to seize any fa® products this season,” he said. He explained the FDA’s incrctf ed staff and facilities will allf it to inspect three times the 4 ume of farm products for inse^i cide residues next year coni] to 1962. More growing crops» be sampled.