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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1965)
Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 2, 1965 THE BATTALION New Accounting, Marketing Heads Named Faculty Appointments Made Two veteran members of Texas A&M’s faculty will become acting department heads in the School of Business Administration. The appointments were effec tive Wednesday, Dr. John E. Pearson, director, said. Associate Professor Edward S. Packeriham will be acting head of the Department of Accounting. With 500 student majors this is among the largest departments on campus. Associate Professor Herbert G. Thompson will be acting head of the Department of Marketing. There are 300 students majoring in marketing. Both professors have experi ence in teaching and the business world. Packenham has served as an accountant and controller for sev eral companies and also has been in a public accounting firm. He also taught at Lincoln College. He holds the BS degree from Lombard College, the MS from A&M and is a certified public accountant. Thompson holds the BS and MBA degrees from Maimi Uni versity, Ohio and has done grad uate work at the University of Illinois. He joined the A&M faculty in 1951 after teaching at James Millikin University and Western Michigan College. Thompson has done sales pro motion and marketing research for varied firms and agencies. ★ ★ ★ THOMPSON PACKENHAM HAIGHT Dr. Gilbert Haight Dr. Gilbert P. Haight Jr., of Swarthmore College joined the Texas A&M faculty Wednesday as professor of inorganic chem istry. He also will take charge of the freshman chemistry pro gram, Dr. Bruno J. Zwolinski, department head, said in an nouncing the appointment. Haight will be a visiting pro fessor for chemical education for the American Chemical Society and Texas Academy of Sciences. A native of Washington State, he received the BA degree from Stanford University in 1943 and the doctorate from Princeton Uni versity in 1947. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in 1947-48. Other honors include serving as professor of physical and inorganic chemistry at the Wagner Free Institute of Science in 1955, Christmas Lec turer at the Philosophical Society of Washington in 1947, Dodge Lecturer at the Franklin Institute in 1959, and Guest Research Chemist for the Technical Uni versity of Denmark in 1960-61. Haight lists membership in many learned societies and is the author of 30 publications includ ing several textbooks. “Introduc tion to the Physical Sciences,” published in 1964 by The Macmil lan Co. is among his latest writ ings. He taught at the University of Hawaii, George Washington Uni versity and the University of Kansas before joining the Swarth more College faculty in 1954. Dr. and Mrs. Haight and their four children will reside at 1211 Winding Road, College Station. ★ ★ ★ History Staffers Seven new staff members have been added to Texas A&M Uni versity’s Department of History and Government for 1965-66. Dr. J. M. Nance, head of the history and government depart ment, made the announcement. They include: Dr. Lester D. Langley, assist ant professor of history, will be responsible for teaching and de veloping the department’s course in Latin American History. He earned a Ph.D. at the University of Kansas and undergraduate de grees at West Texas State Uni versity. Dr. David Woodward, assistant professor of history, will teach a survey course in European His tory, among others. He earned a Ph.D. and M.A. at the University of Texas after completing under graduate studies at Austin Peay State College. Mrs. Mrya Bahme, instructor in early European history, re ceived a M.A. degree in medieval history from the University of Texas and a B.A. degree from Rice University. She has taught at San Antonio College. Robert A. Calvert, instructor in history, will teach survey courses in American History. He did undergraduate work at North Texas State University and is completing a Ph.D. in American History at the University of Tex as, where he was a graduate teaching assistant in history. C. Don Stephens, instructor in government, holds M.A. and B.A. degrees from the University of Houston and is near completion of a Ph.D. in government at Iowa State University. He has been a graduate teaching assistant in government at Iowa State and a government instructor at the Uni versity of Houston. Claude Davis, instructor in gov ernment, has taught for several years at Trinity University. He is an advanced doctoral student in government at the University of Texas. Dr. Smentowski Edwin L. Cobb, instructor in government, has taught at Mont gomery Junior College in Mary land. He holds an M.A. degree in government from George Wash ington University, where he is an advanced doctoral student in government. In addition, he earn ed a B.A. degree from Delta State College, Mississippi. ★ ★ ★ William H. Little The appointment of Dr. Frank J. Smentowski as a Texas A&M chemistry instructor was an nounced by Dr. Bruno J. Zwo linski, head of the department. Smentowski came here from Iowa State University Wednes day. He will also assist in a new electron spin resonance labora tory to study the structure of chemical substances. The new faculty member has been a post-doctoral research associate at Iowa State for five years. He received the doctorate from Northwestern University in 1960. A Colorado native, he received the BS degree from Regis College, Denver, in 1955. Smentowski is a member of various professional societies and the author of several publications. William H. Little of College Station Wednesday joined the Texas A&M University Library System as a junior cataloger, Acting Librarian Rupert C. Wood- The cornerstone for the Massa chusetts State House in Boston was laid July 4, 1795, by Gov. Samuel Adams, assisted by Paul Revere. Family Flour Peaches Kitchen Craft. 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We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities. No Sales To Dealers. More Meat Buys! Ground Beef %?&«£:• Boneless Ham $1.25 Canned Ham 3 £$2.79 $3.99 T-Bone Steak Steak | Loin Tip U59 I U 09 or Club Staak. U.S.D.A. Choice ^ | U3 Grade Heavy Mature Beaf—Lb. X New York loneleis Strip—lb.' Round Steak Full Cut. U.S.D.A. Choice Beef—Lb c $ :V-i- a»iu- Poverty War Methods Told By A&M Prof ward has announced. Little was an instructor in the Department of History and Gov ernment last year. A 1955 graduate of A&M Con solidated High School, he com pleted undergraduate studies at Texas A&M. He holds the M.A. degree in history from the Uni versity of Texas and the M.S. in library science from Louisiana State University. Little resides at 806 Aberdeen Street. ★ ★ ★ Educators working in the “front lines of the battle against the problem of poverty” received some new insight into approaches to use from Texas A&M Sociolo. gist Dr. William P. Kuvlesky this week. “In grappling with methods to help this disadvantaged group, consider the elusive aspects of the social situations of these families—their values, aspire, tions, expectations and relative deprivation,” he challanged. Speaking at Texas A&M’s first Home Management Workshop Kuvlesky said there’s little ques. tion about the magnitude of the poverty problem—in both the urban and rural areas. However, the rural areas often lack effec tive organizations that can help formulate programs of develop ment, he said. “Educators can help these families by establishing meaning ful contact with them, determin ing their felt needs, and develop ing effective programs for meet ing these needs,” Kuvlesky said, The problem of poverty is ex tremely complex, he emphasized, Another workshop speaker, Dr, Margaret Liston, Iowa researcher- educator , said that “families need to have many competencies ii they are to function productively as consumers.” Adequate skills must he learned, she said, in earning, spending, saving, supporting gov ernmental agencies and receiving from them, participating in com munity affairs, allocating re sources among alternative uses, producing goods and services i« the home not for pay, using o! goods and services by individual family members, and educating family members for their con sumer competencies. Forty-five county home demon stration agents participated in the management conference. Rev. Thomas Grat Joins Wesley Staff SB A To Visit Here The Small Business Adminis tration will have a representative at the Bryan-College Station Chamber of Commerce next Wed nesday to discuss the various SBA programs from 8:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. Persons interested in seeing him may contact the Bryan-Col lege Station Chamber of Com merce, TA 2-3721, for an appoint ment. BUNGLED A BANQUET LATELY? You have Ramada’s sympathies. That’s why we set up odr Banquet Planning Service ... to avoid the hundred or so ‘‘disasters’’ possible at any group’s important banquet meeting. Ramada Inn banquets are perfect simply because Ramada has the khow-how. Never go through a do-it-yourself "bungled banquet’’ again. Let Ramada make your next feast a fiesta ... not a fiasco! RAMADA Luxsu/cy INN fort, LpM FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION Call Ramada’s Banquet Planning Division — Ramada Inn, 846-8811 7 0 More tions t forecas Esten, Texas in thea The ‘ Theater first fu Aggie munity tions s added. Esten will sta A £ starting duction is “ by Wil The 1 a shor Other churche ditional staged i The 1 with 36 staged also wi The Rev. J. Phil Kirby, Campu!| Minister of the Wesley Foundal tion, has announced the additioij of the Rev. Thomas Gray to thej Wesley Foundation staff. Gray will serve as Associate Campus Minister in the WesleyJ Foundation and in addition to his j duties there will serve as pastoil of the Alexander Methodist I Church. He began his duties at | the Wesley Foundation on Wed-i nesday. Gray has the Bachelor of I Science degree from Oklahoma State University, and the Bachelor I of Divinity degree from Perkins School of Theology, Southern [ Methodist University, with addi tional graduate work at George J Williams College, Chicago, The Grays with their five! children will reside in the parson-1 age at the Alexander Methodist! Church in the Tabor Community. [ I SEi 15-1 0 Rus No. $1.5 Big Cor $2.(