Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, January 17, 1963 THE BATTALION 21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes! CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get 21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild, and made to taste even milder through its longer length. Tobaccos too mild to biter, pleasure too good to miss! LIGGETT £, MVERS TOBACCO CO. V>YiYi;iVM>mVm length means milder taste The smoke of a Chesterfield King s ' • mellows and softens as it flows .• I through longer length . .. becomes !i*i smooth and gentle to your taste. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: JACK ALLSUP Jack Allsup (B.S.E.E., 1957) is District Construction Fore man of Southwestern Bell in Pine Bluff. He manages the construction of outside plant facilities in the entire south east Arkansas area. Quite an achievement for a young man only five years out of college. Jack has earned this new challenge! He’s performed Avell on other assignments ranging from Installation Fore man to Defense Projects Engineer for Western Electric. On this latter assignment, Jack was borrowed from South western Bell for duty in the voice circuit design group of the vital Project Mercury Program where a number of his original ideas were adopted. Jack Allsup and other young engineers like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America. AMONG THE PROFS [ BAT Librarian Houze To Attendtf Meeting Of Association. Ir Librarian Robert A. Houze will attend a meeting in Chicago of the Association of Research Libraries, an organization which the college library joined recently upon invita tion. The session Jan. 27-28 will be held in conjunction with the mid winter meeting of the American Library Association. Sixty-eight libraries are mem bers of the Association of Re search Libraries. Most are on the campuses of major independent universities and certain state uni versities and colleges. The other members are such libraries as the New York Public Library and the Library of Congress. “With the additional emphasis upon- research here, this honor could hardly come at a more ap propriate time,” Houze said. He expects the membership to prove helpful to the college in securing research projects and in attracting doctoral students. A ★ ★ Dr. Odie B. Faulk, a history in structor, is the author of a lengthy biography of Gen. Tom Green of the Texas Revolution. San Angelo is the county seat of Tom Green. County, and the San Angelo Standard-Times devoted a special tabloid section to the biog raphy. ★ ★ ★ Assistant professor Robert D. Amason will receive the Doctor of Philosophy degree from the Uni versity of Arkansas Jan. 26. Amason is an assistant profes sor of business administration, and his major field of interest in the doctoral program was economics. His dissertation topic was “Pricing Policies and Practices of Retail Lumberyards in Texas.” Amason received the BBA degree from A&M in 1951 and the MBA degree here in 1958. He joined the faculty in 1960. ★ ★ ★ Dr. J. G. Mackin, head of the Department of Biology, will pre sent three papers at the Fifth Annual National Conference on Shellfish Mortality. He will present a paper entitled “Shellfish Mortalities and Diseases in the Gulf of Mexico” at the con ference scheduled Jan. 28-30 in Oxford, Md. He also will give two papers on technical problems dealing with shellfish diseases. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of graduate studies, attended the 15th annual cotton improvement confer ence Tuesday and Wednesday in Dallas. The event, sponsored by the Na tional Cotton Council, was de signed for the betterment and im provement of the cotton industry. Attending the conference with Hall were Dr. Howard E. Joham and Joseph Hacskaylo, both from the Department of Plant Sciences. ★ ★ ★ Dr. A. Y. Moore, a professor in the Department of Dairy Science, spoke at the 12th annual dai^y industry conference which ended today at the University of Arizona. The scientist’s special field of teaching- and research is flavor of dairy foods. The subject of his ' Brien, secretary, and Capt.' Joh talk at the Phoenix meeting was E. Buchanan, treasurer. for one-year terms were W, Is Henry, vice president; J. J, O' “Flavor Control of Dairy Prod ucts.” Moore said Arizona’s primary dairy products are fluid milk and ice cream. Little else in the dairy line is produced there, but climate, feeding practices and cattle man agement pose problems in flavor control. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Aylmer H. Thompson, as sociate professor of oceanography and meteorology, is the new pres ident of the College Station chap ter of the American Meteorological Society. He succeeds Dr. Guy A. Franeesijhini. Other officers elected this week Y ★ A ★ Henry Courtenay, assistant prfr; : fessor of agricultural economi at Purdue University, is spendfc^ this week on the campus complete ing research projects in consume® economics. Formerly a member of teaching staff of the Departmemjf of Agricultural Economics andSoJif ciology, Courtenay is working irj: association with Dr. Robert E Branson, chairman of the Consuir.| er Economics Section of the Dtj partment, on poultry and otliej meat products. Courtenay received his masti degree from A&M in 1960. 1 1 lus your regi FREI lus your regr THR VIP Treatment VIP stands for very important pooch, to the students and teacher at District 1126 school near Darwin, Minn. Here, Sparkey, the school mascot, enjoys lunch hour with her ■’RE® master, Holly Ann Smith, 10-year-old fifth grader. The iu* y°ur regu Labrador goes to school and enjoys the classroom sessions and romping with the kids at recess. (AP Wirephoto) Entomologist de Wilde Speaks On Insects This Afternoon An entomologist from the Neth erlands, Dr. J. de Wilde, will lec ture at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Biological Sciences Lecture Room. All interested persons have been invited to attend the lecture spon sored by the Sigma Xi and the graduate school. The entomologist is considered a world authority on the photo- periodic control of diapause and reproduction of insects, and his announced topic for the local lec ture is “The Photoperiod and Endo- crines of Insects.” Photoperiod- ism is the ability of an organism to measure the relative length of night and day and serves to syn chronize the organism’s activities Prescriptions Filled At Discount Prices Now Ellison Aggieland Pharmacy College Station North Gate 20% OFF ON ALL SWEATERS, SPORT SHIRTS, AND DRESS SHIRTS Sweaters by Catalina and Van Heusen. Shirts by Van Heusen. A&M Men's Shop “Home of Distinctive Men’s Wear” North Gate 1 IFRE® with seasonal changes. Ius Y0Ur regi ; A&M researchers are doing it] vestigation of photoperiodism at: pp the diapause of the pink bolhvont Research here is centered upon I “biological clock” and how it op erates. De Wilde serves as director o'- the entomology laboratory, Agr _ cultural University of Wageninget - I- in the Netherlands. He holds! doctorate in biology from the Uiii| versify of Amsterdam. Widely traveled, he has jus® One f made a tour of South and Centr America under sponsorship of Slit Oil Co. in honor of his place amoti Dutch scientists. He is to as; a visiting professorship of in physiology at the University California, Berkeley. De Wilde in 1961 presented ^Monte invitational address on photopsy riodic control of diapause in insectjL . to the Entomological Society (O | C r America and has received oM professional honors. ; e or Air Force Sets Contract Exams JlTlj Physical examinations for stu dents interested in applying an Air Force ROTC contract ing the spring semester have scheduled Feb. 11-14, Lt. Go- Benjamin F. Smith, officer charge of Air Science II, aid nounced Wednesday. The examinations will be at the college hospital by an A] Force medical team. Mr—F ■ fife UPF yi Students not currently enrolI'-Air ] in Air Science II must reports Room 311 of the Military Scienc ! | Building before Feb. 7 to be sch^J uled and to fill out necessafl forms, Col. Smith said. fa nrrrrri nrH^ Hoiise- | . nec “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot British Motor Cars , !Uand Cli Sales—Parts—Service Jr f f • “We Service All Foreign • 1416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4oljk^ s I -