The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 18, 1966, Image 3

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THE BATTALION
/
Thursday, August 18, 1966
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Smokier To Head
Milk Quality Group
The Texas Milk Quality Coun
cil, a new organization to help
dairymen further improve their
product, has elected Dr. David
Smokier of Dallas as its first
chairman.
His election came at a recent
meeting of TMQC’s temporary
executive committee at Texas
A&M. Smokier is a veterinarian
and dairyman.
Other officers named were Dav
id Gault of Austin, vice chair
man, and Dr. R. E. Leighton of
College Station, secretary-treas
urer.
Gault is a dairyman and offi
cial in the Mid-Tex Producers As
sociation. Leighton is a pro
fessor in the Dairy Section of the
Department of Animal Science.
Leighton said first steps in
forming the organization were
taken last June at an A&M meet
ing of 33 persons directly and in
directly associated with the dairy
industry.
He said the broad purpose of
the TMQC is to seek uniformity
in recommendations to dairymen
for milk quality improvement.
Special emphasis will be on udder
health.
Specific Council objectives are:
—Collect, screen, develop and
dispense uniform information
and guidelines for improving milk
quality.
—Coordinate related efforts of
all dairy groups.
—Encourage needed research.
—'Develop methods for evalu
ating results of quality improve
ment programs.
— Establish quality control
standards as needed.
Leighton said the Council's an
nual meeting will be held during
the Dairyman’s Short Course
Nov. 17 at Texas A&M. The
next meeting of the executive
committee is in October.
Placement Department
Moved Under New Man
Placement and Student Aid de
partments at Texas A&M will
be the responsibility of the di
rector of development, beginning
Sept. 1.
A&M President Earl Rudder an
nounced the transfer of Place
ment and Student Aid from the
office of Dean of Students James
P. Hannigan to Development Di
rector Dorsey E. McCrory.
“The transfer is to reduce
excessive administrative duties
of the dean of students and to
consolidate within a single office
those university functions of a
developmental nature,” President
Rudder explained.
“A majority of funds required
for operating student aid pro
grams are obtained to a large ex
tent through the director of de
velopment,” Rudder continued.
“Many firms, agencies and or
ganizations with which we work
in placement services are active
in A&M’s development program.
This consolidation should broaden
and strengthen total development,
placement and student aid ef
fort.”
Police School
Expects 20
Twenty police officers are ex
pected to participate in the Rio
Grande Valley Police School Sept.
5-30 at the Texas A&M Ex
periment Station two miles east
of Weslaco.
Taught by Texas A&M’s Police
Training Division and guest in
structors, the course stresses con
stitutional provisions of arrest,
public relations, search and seiz
ure, evidence, Texas Code of
Criminal Procedures, narcotics,
defensive driving, criminal and
juvenile law, accident records and
traffic law.
Guest speakers include L. M.
Benavides, special agent in
charge, U. S. Secret Service, San
Antonio; N. K. Woerner, Sgt.
M. S. Morrison and Joel Tisdale,
Texas Department of Public Safe
ty, Austin; Lewis Berry, execu
tive secretary, Texas Sheriff’s
Association; T. L. Ball, chief in
spector, Border Patrol, McAllen;
C. C. Benson, manager, National
Auto Theft Bureau, Dallas; Gus
Krausse, chief, and Rueben Gar
cia, Brownsville Po’ice Depart
ment; Lynnwood Elliot, chief
legal examiner, Texas Liquor
Control Board; Lt. Manuel Cha-
rez, Harlingen Police Depart
ment; District Attorney Oscar Mc-
Innis and Assistant Criminal Dis
trict Attorney Roberto Ornelos,
Hidalgo County, Edinburg.
Wallace Beasley, Police Train
ing Diyision chief at Texas A&M,
directs the school. His aides are
Bill Caffee, Ira Scott and Steve
Clark.
Mexico Meeting
Hosts A&M Profs
Texas A&M scientists will have
a prominent role in a hemispheric
physics meeting at the Universi
ty of Mexico this month.
The American Physical Society,
Sociedad Mexicano De Pisica and
the Canadian Association of Phy
sicists hold a joint meeting Aug.
29-31.
Prof. J. L. Gammel will pre
side as session chairman of In
vited Papers in Particle and Nu
clear Physics. Gammel is also
an invited speaker in the Fac-
ulted de Ciencias Auditorio Aug.
30. His paper on nuclear phy
sics is about spin polarization,
elastic scattering, and reactions.
Associate Dean C. F. Squire
will give an invited lecture be
fore the session on fluid dyna
mics Aug. 31. His talk is about
the experimental discovery of
intrinsic volume viosity in simple
liquids. The TAMU scientists
working on this project are Dr.
D. Naugle, Dr. J. Lunsford, and
J. Singer.
Prof. J. B. Coon and S. B.
Trickey will give a 10 minute
contributed paper on the spec
troscopy of ammonium molecules.
Associate Prof. N. M. Duller,
together with W. G. Cantrell and
E. Lee Walker, will present a
10-minute paper on cosmic ray
studies.
Prof. J. S. Ham and G. M.
Samson will present a paper on
electrical conduction through
poly-ethylene.
Dr. S. A. Kudchadken will pre
sent a paper which she developed
together with Dr. El-Sabban and
Prof. B. Zwolinski of the Depart
ment of Chmistry. Her talk is
about the molecules formalde
hyde.
Hirsch Authors
Magazine Article
A Texas A&M structural re
searcher is the author of an ar
ticle which appears in the August
issue of the Journal of the Pre
stressed Concrete Institute. He
is Dr. T. J. Hirsch, head of the
Structural Research Department
of the Texas Transportation In
stitute and associate professor of
Civil Engineering.
Under the title “Recommended
Practices for Driving Prestressed
Concrete Piling” he tells how to
eliminate costly breakage and
replacement of piles in construc
tion of bridges and causeways.
The article is serving also as
a report of the PCI committee
on prestressed concrete piling for
buildings.
Wallace To Give
Graduate Lecture
Dr. T. D. Wallace of North
Carolina State University will
give a graduate lecture in econo
mics Friday at Texas A&M.
“Multicollinearity and the
Mean Square Error Criterion”
is the topic for the economics
professor’s 1:30 p.m. talk in the
School of Architecture Audi
torium.
The speaker earned B.S. and
M.S. degrees from Oklahoma
State University and the Ph.D.
from the University of Chicago.
He taught at OSU and was a
Graduate Fellow at Chicago. His
special interests are economic
theory, econometrics and experi
mental statistics.
Wallace is a member of the
American Economics Association,
American Farm Economics As
sociation and American Statis
tical Association.
Publications of the Oklahoma
native include articles in the
Journal of American Statistical
Association, Operations Research,
and the Journal of Farm Econo
mics.
Barron To Speak
Here On Sunday
District Judge John M. Barron
of Bryan will speak at the Police-
Community Relations Institute
Sunday through Aug. 25 at Texas
A&M.
Institute Director Wallace
Beasley said Judge Barron will
replace District Judge John
Onion of San Antonio, who with
drew for business reasons.
“The New Criminal Code in
Texas and Police-Community Re
lations” is the topic of Barron’s
talk.
Sixty persons from Texas,
Louisiana, Arkansas and Okla
homa will participate in the A&M
Engineering Extension Service
sponsored seminar.
Head Classifieds
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