a Is Exonerated ^•lOf Many Heart As Cause Diseases Bar mist speaker! mciples of| ■quire a M fsity rules.;, peakers far| fummittee 1 I Fats n the human diet were at least partly exonerated by an A&M scientist here Tuesday as a cause of hardened arteries and heart trouble. | Dr. Raymond Reiser, professor of biochemistry and nutrition, said some fatty acids essential to pro per diet are found in vegetable LAST TIMES TONIGHT gently w hile others are found only 8' the preva| ■st dealing r of speed, t that ieneed d: f the test, 11 identified if, at are consj their powerf e failed to I standards ® speakers us will profe IX'** special introduction tiy WAITER WINCliELL , 6 r 1 ! A HOLLYWOOD ARTISTS PRODUCTION rather thai| I released by SUTTON PICTURES CORP. ;ech' ”| KSEiaHE I iSiS SfiliifeS i ’ JOHNNY CASNBONALD WOODS CSV FOOESTERMHELA MASON Released by SUTTON PICTURES C08P. LATE SHOW TONIGHT 'he Many dents to tem is of ity house nt'eriority principal An ALLIED ARTISTS Release Plus lyological er fish- nd in the , perhaps d to feel ill home- e people, marks in Look at > A WILLIAM CASTLE PRODUCTION I STARTS SUNDAY How did they ever make a movie of LOLITA in animal fats. Speaking at the second day o£ the three-day dairy manufacturers conference, the researcher said ab sence of fats in the diet, or too much of either vegetable or animal fat, can lead to faulty nutrition. “It is thus not fat in the diet which is harmful, but an unbal ance in the kinds of fat,” the pro fessor said. “What is needed is a balance of animal type and vegetable type fats.” MAN IS AN omnivorous animal. His degistive system is adapted to a variety of plant and animal tis sues. His requirements for fat, protein, carbohydrates, minerals, vitamins, energy and roughage can be met only by a broad spectrum diet, Reiser, explained. The conference is held each year to discuss the latest progress and problems of making and market ing dairy foods. Sponsors are the Department of Dairy Science in co-operation with the Agricul tural Experiment Station, Agricul tural Extension Service and the Engineering Extension Service. Reiser told the estimated 75 per- PALACE Broan Z’$$79 NOW SHOWING QUEEN “FIESTA NITE” TONIGHT 6 P. M. sons attending the session that lack of essential fatty acids prob ably results in cholesterol accumu lations in the body, some of it finding its way into walls of arter ies. “Therefore, the table seems to he turned,” he said. “Instead of f^t being the cause, it may be the cure and prevention of atheros clerosis.” FAT SERVES many functions, he said. It is the best source of energy; gives that feeling of well being at the end of a good meal; aids in utilization of certain vita mins; adds flavor to food; in creases emptying time of the sto mach and thus keeps a person from getting hungry too soon between meals, actually helping to prevent over eating. “These facts mean that one must not eliminate fat from his diet, or he runs the risk of depriving him self of an essential nutrient and possibly the means of ridding the body of its excess cholesterol,” Reiser said. The scientist added that exercise is a definite factor in blood choles terol levels. Ohio Researcher Will Present Graduate Lecture Dr. Louis Gordon, dean of gradu ate studies at the Case Institute of f Technology, Cleveland, Ohio, will present a graduate lecture at 4 p.m. next Friday in Room 231 of the Chemistry Building. Gordon’s topic will deal with ho mogeneous precipitation methods, in which he has conducted much work and research. According to Dr. R. D. Whealy, professor of chemistry, Gordon has published a book on “Precipitation from Homogeneous Solutions.” He has also published 80 papers re lating to analytical chemistry and homogeneous pi'ecipitation. Gordon was the U. S. editor of the “Talanta,” an analytical chem ical pournal published in England. He has also received 14 grants from the Atomic Energy Commis sion in order to carry on his re search. This lecture is being presented especially for graduate students in chemistry, biochemistry and me teorology, but everyone interest ed has been invited to attend. NOW SHOWING inside a irse, you | L e glance vert-so | >u are at rrect for j.. paragon absolute rtarlboro cos, will that is- ing you* by don t : mean- >ke your ij turously >u are if | fcegory- Iicr than at there ! the clas- \ :lge, stu- ? i.ude was a,n Stur- the hu- was ten y knots- - bridge,’ as they tic smart ay? You “criority. income- ase for 3 o accept akS 3 '! to have lie older =ciousas with c Shulw"” -trlborot —on. -Hajaue as gypsy rose Lee in tne srorv of tne girL who bEcaivie tne gPEatESti show In show busiNess.^ FROM THE BROADWAY SMASHI, Frank Sinatra In “MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE” and Burt Lancaster In “THE UNFORGIVEN” THE BATTALION Thnrsdny, January 17, 10(18 College Station, Texas Page 3 ON INSTRUMENTATION Symposium Opens Next Week The eighteenth annual instru mentation symposium for the pro cess industries wlil be held here next week. Sponsored by the Department of Chemical Engineering, . the series of meetings was started here in 1946 to present practical techni cal information concerning the in strumentation of continuous flow processes so important to the oil, gas and chemical industries of the Southwest. R. R. Jackson, vice president for planning and supply of the Mobil Oil Co., and F. G. Rodgers, vice president, IGM Corporation, will deliver keynote addresses opening the conference next Wednesday, Dr. P. T. Eubank, symposium di rector, said. Nine technical papers will be given the next two days by sci entists and engineers who are in strumentation experts for compan ies such as Union Cai’bide, Mon santo, Dow, Humble, General Elec tric, IBM and Brown and Root. The first technical discussion of Monsanto’s new Chocolate Bayou instrument and computer system will be of special interest. Be cause of Carla interest in the space program, a paper will be present ed by General Electric scientists on instrumentation and data acquisi tion for the testing of space vehi cles in environmental chambers. Forty-eight instrument com panies plan to exhibit new com mercial equipment. The registration fee is $10 per person for the three-day meeting. PEANUTS By Charles M. Schuh /DID« I0 ; TH(5 GRANDMA 6IVI 5 A WWfiBLANi \T0{jd£l. 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