The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 08, 1966, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 8, 1966 THE BATTAU^^N
Project Reveals Deer
Eat Midnight Snacks
Deer, like some humans, eat
midnight snacks.
A coordinated project between
ALASrooK.
YoRiClC
HE COULD
UaVe MADE
IT -WiTVI
CLIFFS
lTVoTES <
explain the plot and
characters of more than 125
major plays and novels —
including Shakespeare's
works. Improve your
understanding —and your
grades. Call on Cliff’s Notes
for help in any
literature course.
125 Titles in all —among
them these favorites:
Hamlet • Macbeth • Scarlet Letter • Tale
of Two Cities • Moby Dick • Return of the
Native • The Odyssey • Julius Caesar •
Crime and Punishment • The Iliad • Great
Expectations • Huckleberry Finn • King
Henry IV Part I • Wuthering Heights • King
Lear • Pride and Prejudice • Lord Jim •
Othello • Gulliver’s Travels • Lord of
$1 at your bookseller
/v, or write:
CUFF'S NOTES. INC.
B«tka*y Static*, Lincoln, Ncbr. 6SS0S
Texas A&M’s wildlife science and
physics departments to automate
deer census taking has produced
this, and other bits of informa
tion about the animal.
Dr. Dayle Sittler of physics and
Jack Inglis, instructor in wildlife
science and project director, co
operate on the project. It seeks to
tie in data from deer ranging
habits gleaned from radio direc
tion finding equipment and a
counting device to produce a
means of making deer population
counts.
“Wildlife biologists spend 20
per cent of their time walking
deer census lines,” Inglis com
mented. “We’re trying to auto
mate this by counting how many
deer crawl under a fence.”
A delicate switch attached to
the bottom strands of a barbed
wire fence is wired to a recorder.
Timed to turn on every two
hours, the tape recorder is fed a
pulse for every deer (or any oth
er animal) that crawls under the
fence and trips the switch.
The apparatus designed by Sit-
TTI Engineer Heads
National Committee
M. D. Shelby, research engi
neer for the Texas Transporta
tion Institute, has been appoint
ed chairman of the American
Concrete Institute’s Committee
325, “Structural Design of Con
crete Pavements for Highways
and Airports.”
Shelby will attend the 62nd an
nual meeting of ACI in Philadel
phia March 7-11.
tier is arranged so that the time
(within two hours) of passage
and number of deer per group
can be determined.
Fence count data is then co
related with ranging habits de
termined from neckband radios
placed on deer to get population
figures.
The switch, which will work
only on strand-wire fences, is the
weak spot in the system.
“We’re testing it and can learn
a lot about deer when we get the
bugs out,” Inglis said.
Sittler indicated an additional
40 of the fist-size switches are
being ordered. Ten have been in
use on the Welder Wildlife Foun
dation Refuge near Sinton. The
Welder Foundation, Texas Parks
and Wildlife Department and
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station are supporting the study.
Data collected already indi
cates deer feed and move around
at other times than dawn and
dusk, Sittler said.
“Our equipment shows they
are on the move quite a bit
around midnight,” the physicist
stated.
“From group counts, we’ve
been able to tell a lot about deer
traffic in a particular location,”
Inglis went on. “Deer become so
cially aggressive in the summer
and split up into single animal
groups.”
“They get back together in the
fall, when the group counts run
from two to five,” he added. “We
have noted as many as 12 deer in
a single group.’
— Job
WEDNESDAY
Los Angeles County, California
— civil engineering.
Olin Mathieson Chemical Cor
poration — chemical engineering,
industrial engineering, mechani
cal engineering, accounting.
Standard Oil Company of Cali
fornia and Chevron Research
Company — chemical engineer
ing, electrical engineering, me
chanical engineering, petroleum
engineering.
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line
Corporation — chemical engi
neering, civil engineering, electri
cal engineering, mechanical engi
neering.
Calls —
NASA Manned Spacecraft Cen
ter — aerospace engineering,
electrical engineering, mechani
cal engineering, mathematics,
physics.
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
U. S. Naval Ordnance Labora
tory — aerospace engineering,
electrical engineering, mathe
matics, mechanical engineering,
physics.
Bell Telephone System — civil
engineering, electrical engineer
ing industrial engineering, me
chanical engineering, economics,
mathematics, physics, accounting,
business administration.
Make your appearance in
FARAH
AND LET TME CNICKS
FALL WHERE THEY MAY!
The sharp styling of Farah slacks
puts the frosting on anything
you might cook up!
TEAGUE, GENERAL CONFER AT FETE
College Station Cong. Olin E. Teague chats dinner that attracted more than 2,000 gov-
with Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John Me- ernment officials and businessmen. (City
Connell at a dinner held recently at Wash- News Bureau Photo)
ington. Both men attended the Silver Quill
Adkins To Serve
On Highway Board
A Texas A&M researcher in
economic aspects of transporta
tion will serve on national ad
visory panels for highway re
search.
Dr. William G. Adkins, re
search economist of the Texas
Transportation Institute and pro
fessor of transportation econo
mics at Texas A&M, has been
elected to the Register of the
National Cooperative Highway
Research Program, Highway Re
search Board, National Academy
of Sciences. He participated in
the first 1966 meeting of the
Register last week in Washing
ton, D. C.
Members of the Register serve
on various advisory panels which
make recommendations regard
ing policy decisions and proce
dures for the HRB Highway Re
search Program. Advisory panel
functions are to organize re
search, establish research ob
jectives, review proposals, de
termine placement of projects, in
vestigate progress, provide ad
vice, and evaluate accomplish
ment.
Adkins earned B.S., M.S., and
Ph.D. degrees in agricultural eco
nomics at Texas A&M. He is
the author of numerous publica
tions dealing with land tenure,
land values, and agricultural
labor and population, and of re
search papers dealing with econo
mic affects of highway improve
ment.
His most recent accomplish
ments in research have dealt with
projects at TTI involving evalua
tion of highway travel time of
commercial vehicles. He is as
sociate head of the Institute’s
department of transportation eco
nomics.
Bulletin Board
WEDNESDAY
Aggie Wives Bridge Club will
not meet as originally announced.
THURSDAY
....Pasadena Hometown Club will
meet at 6 p.m. in front of Hen
derson Hall and behind dorm 12.
English Scholar
To Visit Feb. 17-25
Peter H. Merritt, Nuffield
Traveling Scholar from England,
will visit Texas A&M Feb. 17-25.
Merritt is a graduate from the
Essex Institute of Agriculture in
England.
Wintertime shortcake: layer
thawed, drained frozen berries
between white cake layers; frost
with sweetened whipped cream;
sprinkle with grated coconut,
•
ARE YOU
•
INTERESTED
•
IN A DIAMOND
•
FOR YOUR
•
SENIOR RING?
•
TALK WITH US.
•
THERE IS
•
NO SUBSTITUTE
•
FOR EXPERIENCE!
•
AND WE “HAVE
IT.”
•
NO BRAG — JUST
FACT.
•
COME IN—
•
WE CAN PROVE IT,
SANKEY PARK
Jewelers
111 N. Main — Bryan
PURPLE TREE NIGHT CLUB
West Hwy. 21
Starting Feb. 7, I will have a balloon dance every Monday
—Prize To Winner—
MUSIC BY JOHNNY & THE DIAMONDS
Also Sadie Hawkins Dance every Wednesday
—Ladies Free—Music by Johnny & The Diamonds
SATURDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 12
THE ROAD RUNNERS — Rock & Roll
If you re looking for a nice comfy place
to work
after graduation,
forget about General Electric.
We don’t have any place where you
can curl up and snooze away the
next forty years of your career.
There are no quiet little nooks in
any of General Electric’s 130 oper
ating businesses in 19 countries
round the world.
But if you’re the wide-awake
type, G.E. can provide the excite
ment to keep you that way. Your
first assignment may be helping us
find applications for a whole new
family of plastics recently devel
oped by G.E. Or you may be work
ing at Cape Kennedy on the Apollo
moon program. Or you may be
working on the marketing team for
a new home appliance.
T^ogress /s Our Most Important Product
One thing is certain: You’ll be
working. You’ll have plenty of re
sponsibility. What you won’t have
is a chance to doze off in the prime
years of your career.
Talk to the man from G.E. when
he visits campus. Come to General
Electric, where the young men are
important men.
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. • EL PASO, TEXAS