The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 11, 1966, Image 5

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    A&M Scientist To Study
Ocean Currents Off Brazil
THE BATTALION
Thursday, August 11, 1966 College iStation, Texas
Page 5
A Texas A&M research scien
tist will combine forces with the
Argentine Navy to study ocean
currents off Argentina and Bra
zil.
Funded by a National Science
Foundation grant of $44,500,
work begins Sept. 1 for a period
of one year.
Capt. Luis A. Capurro, Depart
ment of Oceanography research
scientist, will direct efforts of
several Argentine scientists,
Argentine Navy ships and other
facilities.
“Four major cruises will be
made,” Capurro said. “There
will be others of secondary na
ture.”
Studies of “Currents and Wa
ter Masses in the Southwest At
lantic” will include infrared ther
mometer measurements by air
craft, current profiles from 100
to 3,000 fathoms utilizing a Rich
ardson-type meter built by Geo
dyne of Boston, other special cur
rent meters and parachute
drogues for synoptical ocean cov
erage. Data analysis will be by
McGuire Receives PhJD.
Delbert McGuire, Texas A&M's
Department of Journalism head,
received his Ph.D. in mass corn-
communications from the Uni
versity of Iowa in absentia Wed
nesday.
McGuire was named head of
A&M’s Department of Journal
ism in 1963 after 11 years on
the journalism faculty at North
Texas State University. Previ
ously, McGuire edited “The
Southern Florist and Nursery
man” and “The Automatic
World” in Fort Worth.
McGuire earned bachelor and
master degrees in journalism at
the University of Texas.
“Performance of the Presiden
tial Press Conference” is the title
of McGuire’s dissertation. It cov
ers presidential press conferences
since Woodrow Wilson, and in
cludes a personal interview with
former President Eisenhower.
President Johnson’s views were
expressed by Press Secretary Bill
Moyers, a student of McGuire's
at North Texas State.
IBM.
“We will design an experiment
to see the degree of reliability of
the current meters,” Capurro
noted.
Atlantis I, a specially designed
research vessel, has been acquir-
ed by the Argentine NSF for us
in the work, he revealed. The
former Woods Hole Oceanogra
phic Institute ship is being fitted
at Boston and may not be ready
until February, 1967, cruise.
The A&M scientist said the
September cruise will examine
the warm Brazil current, polar
Falkland current and the distinct
boundary between them.
Argentine scientists cooperat
ing in the NSF research include
bachelor degree holding civilians
trained with the U. S. Navy in
Washington and the Norway Geo
physical Institute at Bergen.
Capurro is a native of Buenos
Aires and officer of the country’s
Navy. He commanded ocean
ographic vessels and an icebreak
er and was Argentine Navy
hydrographer four years.
The 45-year-old scientist has
participated in numerous research
cruises in the Antarctic.
A NEW TWIST
Fourteen-year-old Judy Reeve of Weymouth, Mass., finds
herself twisted into a knot and apparently can see no way
out as she has a gn at a game called, appropriately enough,
“Twister.” The object of the game is to place hands and
feet on different colored dots after a wheel is spun and
keep your balance. The action took place at a teen-age
fair in Boston. (AP Wirephoto)
The Church..For a Fuller Life..For You..
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL
906 Jersey Street, So. Side of Campus
Rector: William R. Oxley
Asst.—Rev. Wesley Seeligrer
8:00 A.M. & 9:15 A.M. Sunday
Services
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
8:00 & 10:00 A.M. Worship
9:00 A.M.—Bible Study
5 :16 P.M.—Young People's Class
6 :00 P.M.—Worship
7 :15 P.M.—Aggie Class
9 :30 A.M.—Tues. - Ladies Bible Class
7:15 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :45 A.M.—hjorning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7 :00 P.M.—Preaching Service
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School
11 :00 A.M.—Sunday Service
11:00 A.M.-2 P.M.—Tues. R<
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
.[ Syr --^
Class
brsb
Ves
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
(Missouri Synod)
10:00 A.M.—Bible Class
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:30 P.M.—-Wednesday Vesper
Not Meeting For Remainder of The
Summer.
ending Rm.
7 :00-8 :00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room
8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship
FIRST BAPTIST
9 :30 AM—Sunday School
10 :45 AM Morning Worship
6 :10 PM—Training Union
7 :20 PM—Evening Worship
6:30 PM—Choir Practice & Teachers’
meetings (Wednesday)
7 :30 P.M.—Midweek Services (Wed.)
SECOND BAPTIST
710 Eisenhower
9 :45 A.M.—Sunda
7-9 A.M.—iun. Breakfast - Stu. Ctr.
9:46 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:00 P.M.-
7:16 P.M.-
6:46 A.M.—Fri. Communion Service
Wesley Foundation
day School
11 :00 A.M.—Church Service
6 :30 P.M.—Training Union
7 :30 P.M.—Church Service
[.—Morning Worship
!.—Sun. Single Stu. Fellowship
'.—Wed. Student Fellowship
OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN
8:16 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at
Worship
9 :30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All
Holy Communion—1st Sun. Ea. Mo.
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
Sunday Masses—7:30, 9:00 and 11:00
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:15 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship
7 :30 P.M.—Evening Service
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7 :30 P.M.—Evening Worship
A&M METHODIST
8:30 A.M.—Morning Worship
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship
5 :30 P.M.—Campus & Career Class
6:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meetings
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th East and Coulter, Bryan
8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood meeting
10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School
6 :30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Homestead & Ennis
9:46 A.M.—Sunday School
10:50 A.M.—Morning Worship
5 :30 P.M.—Young People
THE TIME
OF
THE CHURCH FOR ALL.a.
ALL FOR THE CHURCH
The Church is the greatest factor
rth 1
id go
house of spiritual values. Without a
e grej
on earth for the building o
ter and good citizenship. It is a store-
f of charac-
[t is a store-
w. vu. U v>o. Without a
strong Church, neither democracy
»ng C
civili
nor civilization can survive. There
ore four sound reasons why every
erson should attend services i
Uhurcl
*ake. (2) For
his children’s sake. (3) For the sake
of his community and nation. (4)
Church itself,
which needs his moral and material
support. Plan to go to church regu
larly and read your Bible daily.
person should attend services regu
larly and support the Church. The)
are: (1) For his own sake ~
ity i
For the sake of the
There’s happiness and ice
cream all over her face! It
takes so little to delight a
child, and we sometimes
wish that we could be satis
fied as easily.
As we grow older, we ac
quire expensive new posses
sions but tire of them. We
try costly new entertain
ments until they bore us.
Even though our lives are
full of small pleasures . . .
the fragrance of fresh-cut
grass, the soothing sound of
rain, the silent beauty of
stars . .. we somehow aren’t
really aware of them any
longer. Even life itself, the
greatest gift we have, can
seem bleak and fruitless.
What can restore our aware
ness of the joy and privilege
of being alive?
Jesus knew about this
problem, and He had the
answer for all who need it.
He has promised life . . .
more abundant life ... to
those who will follow Him.
And He will help, every step
of the way.
Copyright 1966,Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Va.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Job
Psalms
Psalms
Ecclesiastes
Isaiah
Luke
Hebrews
22:21-30
1:1-6
11 9:137-144
2:1-1 1
65:17-25
15:3-10
12:7-11
'riJ*S
filet ^J^unerai ^Jfo
BRYAN, TEXAS
502 West 26th St.
PHONE TA 2-1572
Campus
and
Circle
Theatres
College Station
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
University
National Bank
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Sure. Sign of Flavor
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Farm Dairies
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
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‘Serving Texas Aggies”
Bryan Building
& Loan
Association
BRYAN
yip—
ICE CREAM
AND
MILK
Ag College
Adds Two
To Staff
The Texas A&M Department
of Animal Science will have two
new staff members in Septem
ber, Dr. R. E. Patterson, dean of
the College of Agriculture, has
announced.
They are Dr. C. W. Dill, who
will join the Dairy Section as an
associate professor, and Dr. H.
A. Fitzhugh Jr., who will be an
assistant professor in the Animal
Breeding and Genetics Section.
Patterson said Dill will have
responsibility for sensory evalu
ation of meat and dairy products.
The position involves half teach
ing and half research.
Dill, a Greenville, South Caro
lina, native, received his BS de
gree in agriculture from Ken
tucky’s Berea College in 1954,
and his MS degree in dairy manu
facturing in 1957 and a doctor
ate in food science in 1963 from
North Carolina State University.
He has served as assistant pro
fessor at the University of Ne
braska since 1962.
Fitzhugh also will be on a 50
percent teaching and 50 percent
research basis. The San Antonio
native received his BS, MS and
PhD degrees in animal science
at Texas A&M in 1961, 1963 and
1965. He is now completing a
year’s study on a NATO Post-
Doctoral Science Fellowship at
the Animal Breeding Research
Organization of Great Britain,
Edinburgh, Scotland.
He is a member of the Ameri
can Society of Animal Science,
Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi, and
the Biometric Society.
Police Institute
To Draw About 60
Sixty persons are expected to
participate in the ninth Police-
Community Relations Institute
Aug. 21-25 at Texas A&M.
Police officers from Texas,
Louisiana, Arkansas and Okla
homa are pre-registered for the
A&M Engineering Extension
Service sponsored seminar.
Wallace Beasley, chief of
A&M’s Police Training Division,
said the institute encourages po
lice to place more emphasis on
promoting good will and under
standing between themselves and
the public.
The speakers will include Noel
McQuown, deputy chief com
mander of personnel and train
ing, Los Angeles Police Depart
ment; Dr. John T. Holbrook,
chief psychiatrist, Beverly Hills
Sanitarium, Dallas; Dr. George
Killinger, director, Institute of
Correctional Studies; Sam Hous
ton State College, Huntsville; Dr.
Robert J. Gallati, New York Cen
tral Intelligence Service director;
John Neibel, University of Hous
ton Law School dean; District
Judge John Onion of San An
tonio; Houston Attorney Clyde
Woody; and Glen H. McLaugh
lin, chief, Personnel and Staff
Services, Texas Department of
Public Safety, Austin.
E. R. McWilliams, director of
the National Conference of
Christians and Jews, Houston,
will give the institute summation
at the closing luncheon.
Shelton To Join
Economics Division
B. R. (Bill) Shelton, executive
vice president and general mana
ger of Industrial Development,
Inc., Wichita Falls, will rejoin
Texas A&M’s Industrial Eco
nomics Research Division Mon
day.
Shelton was an assistant re
search economist for eight years
before becoming assistant execu
tive director of the Texas Indus
trial Commission in Austin. He
moved to Wichita Falls in 1964.
James R. Bradley, Industrial
Economics Research Division
head, said Shelton will direct
projects conducted under the
State Technical Service Institute.
Bradley said his department has
been awarded $56,000 to estab
lish a model for dissemination of
scientific and technical informa
tion to the electronic and pri
mary metal industries.
Shelton earned a BBA in mar
keting at the University of Tex
as in 1955 and has done graduate
work at A&M.
A major in the U. S. Army Re
serve, Shelton has membership in
Texas, Southern and American
Development Councils. He has
written magazine articles for
“Texas Town and City” and
“West Texas Today.”
Nelson To Lecture
At Danforth Confab
Dr. Bardin H. Nelson, profes
sor of Sociology in the Texas
A&M Department of Agricul-
AGGIES ... DON’T DELAY!
Order Your Boots Now For Future
Delivery - Small Payment Will Do
YOUR BOOTS MADE TO ORDER
Convenient Lay-Away Plan
ONLY $55.00 A PAIR
Economy Shoe Repair & Boot Co.
509 W. Cojnmerce, San Antonio
CA 3-0047
Humpty Dumpty Children Center
Now accepting applications for
KINDERGARTEN for Fall Term
—Chidren age 5 before January
1, 1967.
MRS. SUE ALLBAUGH, B.Sc. — Teacher
3406 S. College 823-8626
Faculty - Staff
Investigate TAX - SHELTERED
Life Insurance
Phone Flop Colson
Off.—846-4223 or Res.—846-7264
No Obligation
tural Economics and Sociology,
is one of 12 lecturers in the
United States invited to lead a
seminar at the Danforth Associ
ate Conference Monday through
Aug. 21 at Estes Park, Colo.
Nelson’s seminar will be en
titled, “Social Change, Profiles
and Projections.”
Other seminars include “Ethics
and Foreign Affairs,” by Dr. W.
C. Olson, Dean of the School of
International Affairs, Columbia
University; “Innovations in
Higher Education,” by Dr. W.
David Zimmerman, Assistant Di
rector of the Danforth Founda
tion; “The Art of Federico Fel
lini” by Dr. Donald Costello, Uni
versity of Notre Dame.
Danforth Associates from the
colleges and universities of the
nation will be in attendance at
this conference.
Kunze To Leave
On Trip Saturday
Dr. George W. Kunze of the
Texas A&M Department of Soil
and Crop Sciences will leave here
Saturday on a trip to Alaska and
Japan.
He will teach a three-day short
course in X-Ray diffraction
methods and techniques to mem
bers of the Institute of Marine
Sciences and the Geology De
partment of the University of
Alaska during the first phase of
his tour.
Next, he will travel to Japan
to participate in meetings of the
Pacific Science Congress in To
kyo and will take part in a re
lated scientific post - Congress
tour. He also will present a re
search paper on glacial and chan
nel bottom sediments.
The professor’s special re
search field is soil mineralogy.
Kunze will return to College
Station on Sept. 11.
Accident Control
Seminar Scheduled
A three-day seminar, ABC’s of
Industrial Accident Control, is
scheduled Sept. 12-13-14 at Tex
as A&M.
Twenty-five participants will
study techniques for setting- up
or improving accident prevention
programs. Supervisory Develop
ment Division staffers will teach
the Engineering Extension Serv
ice sponsored course.
Topics include accident causes
and costs, principles, investigat
ing, inspecting, reporting, rec
ords analysis, effective safety
programs and meetings.
(See Briefs, page 6)
Charles F. Johnson
’62
College Master
Representative
Fidelity Union Life
846-8228
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