The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 15, 1972, Image 3
Weather Research Done By A&M Scientists pjeteorological research in widely separated parts of the „ world is conducted by A&M sci- “ mtists. rltrs i Programs of Dr. Aylmer H. rhompson and Prof. John F. Sriffiths in Alaska and Spain, s iitiatd id fa no weire Sspectively, were described re- srt “ :ently in a Meteorology Depart- 11: nent seminar. Griffiths worked last summer n Spain through the United Na- ,EN ion’s Food and Agricultural Or- Ajj. jpnization (FAO). Thompson re- :ently concluded a 15-month stay llac in Alaska, funded primarily through a $29,100 National Sci- jnce Foundation grant. •kticd Another TAMU meteorology professor, Dr. Robert A. Clark, ^ consults and teaches each sum- IsAvt mer in Barcelona, Venezuela. jU2 Their research interests are al most as divergent as their loca- ions. Griffiths, a climatologist, -r# studied problems in evaporation at Badajoz. His goal is determi nation of effects on crops and pastureland in the Central Span ish area. Clark specialized in hydrology and hydrometeorology. Research on polar inversions and glacial meteorology was car ried out by Thompson at Fair banks, Anchorage and on a 1,500 square mile glacier in the Juneau ice field. A veteran investigator of polar weather processes, Thompson has conducted research in Alaska the last five years. His recent NSF- funded trip was for study of “Inversion Formation, Mainte nance and Breakdown Processes over Northwest America.” Supplementary support for this work at Fairbanks during the winter was provided by the Uni versity of Alaska, National Weather Service and Air Force. “I was working on polar in version and ice fog problems, of interest to the Weather Service, Air Force and University of Alas ka people,” Thompson said. “The fog is composed of ice crystals and forms an extremely signifi cant hazard in city areas.” “The NWS in Alaska was help ful in providing data and work ing space at Fairbanks, Anchor age and Juneau,” related the sci entist who was accompanied by his wife Ann. She was his princi pal field assistant, in taking ob servations and data plotting. A bonus of the Thompson’s trip was seeing their daughter. She and her husband moved from Washington State to near Fair banks last year. The TAMU specialist in satel lite meteorology left Fairbanks in the late spring for Juneau and summer on the ice field. It in cluded teaching and research at the Summer Institute of Glacio- logical and Arctic Science, an NSF-funded program conducted by Michigan State. The scientific group spent most of the summer “roughing it” on the ice, where temperatures just above the surface rise to 36 de grees during the summer. They usually stayed at camps situated across 70 kilometers of the glacier. Buildings and instrument sites were located on rock outcrops, where possible. Tent quarters ml )[)Anyt| ue, | For Aii ncy. >■ Barcelona RESERVE A GREAT APARTMENT FOR FALL RENTAL OFFICE NOW OPEN FOR SELECTION 700 Dominik Call 846-1700 for Information Student Section, Tennis Courts, Basketball and Volleyball Courts, T.V. Lounge, Pool Table, Club Rooms. Student Rates. Efficient, Discreet professional Management. Security Guard. The Newest in Apartments in College Station/Bryan Area. Student Plan $62.50 per month. We have separate Girls’ Dorm. Vet Med Grad Does Revolutionary Transplanting With Cow Embryos An A&M veterinary medicine and physiology of reproduction graduate was featured in the Sept. 4 issue of Newsweek for his revolutionary work in trans planting embryos from one cow to another. Dr. Duane C. Kraemer, San Antonio veterinarian, and Rub- ottom, Okla., rancher James Dula have developed a transplant tech nique that Newsweek called “Sci- Fi on the Range.” Dr. Kraemer, who has a Ph.D. in physiology of reproduction from TAMU as well as the D.V.M., and Dula established Livestock Breeders International, Inc., four years ago and used a nonfatal embryo collection tech nique involving a minor operation on a cow. Embryo transplants in cows were first successful in 1950, where an egg is fertilized in one cow’s womb and then switched to a second cow for gestation and birth. LBI’s technique offers the ad vantage of upgrading purebred herds with vharacteristics of sev eral exotic European breeds. An example is the Chianiana breed from Italy, a two-ton prod uct four times the size of a stan dard U. S. steer. Stringent U. S. laws intended to curb hoof-and-mouth disease have prevented importing of ex otic European animals. Frozen semen can be used, but it takes at least two generations to produce an animal only three- fourths purebred. LBI has an 80 per cent success rate and the transplanted calf at birth is seven-eighth blood, which cattle associations register as purebred. LBI’s procedure involves a su perior cow chemically induced to ovulate several eggs at a time. The cow is artificially inseminated with semen from a purebred bull and in four to six days the fertil ized eggs are collected and trans planted into less valuable cows. In May, the firm set a prece dent with two purebred calves, Simmental heifers, transplanted into Hereford cows. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES day oC per wc ic per word each additional day Minimum charpe—"oc Classified Display l; S1.00 per column inch each insertion FOR SALE It,you love blue, I’m with you. 12 x 70 ICastle. Comet ahd take me away iif u afr!' usu "iBa Honda CB-350, S395. Call 846-9220 R 5. 14914 Remington electric typewriter. Call Mrs. ijining 846-1321 or 846-6160. 149tl [’70 Torino two-door hardtop V-8 loaded. ! to appreciate. 846-2818. 149t5 Inly 1,900 miles $596. exce Call 846-6092. 149t6 §2 girl’s, 24 inch bicycles, both in running Indition, call 846-2367 after 5 :00 p. m. 148t2 16 c weeks old registered toy fox terrier Several natural bobs. .?35. Call 689- $1 after 6 p. m. 147t3 68 Pontiac Tempest, V-8 326, 3 speed, eomlitioned, radio, heater. $275. Call 1237 between 6 and 6 p. m. 146t4 jHonda 100 CL 71, 500 miles. Adult $326. 845-2812 between 8 and 5. 14Gt4 «1967 Triumph Bonneville. Excellent. 846-4574. 146t5 AKC Collie stud. Champion line. For formation call 846-8321. 146t4 FOR RENT Quiet, wooded area, pleasant, three roon furnished, air conditioned apartment, adults 822-6668. 149t One bedroom house, 1 commodate one or two Bryan. Call 823-5635. 148t3 apartmel on bank of the Brazos. 846-5132 or 8' 5124. 146t4 FRENCH QUARTER APARTMENTS 2 blocks from A&M. 1 bedroom furnished or unfurnished. Pool and Laundry Facilities. Call 846-8981 144tfn House, barn & corrals with 1 for rent on Bonneville road just off East Pass. Call 822-1328 from 8 to 5:30, 82: 0367 after 5:30. 142tf ores t Bj 1 bedroom nicely furnished house, $65 month. Call 823-6045. 143tf 31 fcF'-'’71 Yahama 175 Enduro. Excellent con I /I n ’ miles. See at V-l-G Hensel. A* 196 145tfn 1967 VW Bus completely rebuilt $1,200. Oil. 143t7 Of‘~ 1972 Honda SL-350, only 1100 miles, ex tent condition, 846-2998. 142tfn ttpe 1967 Chevrolet % ton pickup, V-8 with »sc neck hitch, brake control, in good ipe. Call 822-3980 after 6 p. m. 1971 Honda CB-350. 6,000 miles. $576. ■11846-0548. 136tfn 1) . I FOR ml best RESULTS ,.«* TRY ^BATTALION classified r£ r 'll —EVERYDAY— Havoline, Amalie, Conoco, Phillips 66, Gulflube — 35c qt. i , K a SPARK PLUGS I A.C., Champion, Autolite 69f? Each Alternators 18.95 exchange j Starters - Generators from 13.95 exchange Most any part for most American and some Foreign cars at dealer price Your Lawnboy and Friedrich Dealer Prestone Anti-Freeze and summer coolant $1.69 Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25 822-1669 Giving Better Service For 26 Years In Bryan BROADMOOR ARMS APARTMENTS 2 Bedroom Furnished or Unfurnished. All utilities and cable paid. All electric, central air & heat. From $136. Four Students $33.76 each. From Manor East Shopping Center take Villa Maria to first light, turn right on Carter Creek, go 3 blocks and turn left on Broad moor. Office 1411 Broadmoor. 5 minutes to campus. 846-2737 138tfn PERSONAL Do you need to buy quality furnitur Discount Furniture sells and offers to y quality and national brand furniture discount prices. You must see us befo Texas Ave. Texas Ave., corner of East 22nd North Texas Ave. Next door to Emp ment Commission. Phone 822-1227. If 3 need furniture, you cannot afford not see us before you buy at Discount Fur an loy WORK WANTED Typing 822-0526. 135tfn Typing erienced. near campus. Electric. Ex- Symbols. 846-8965 or 846-0571. I24tfn Typing. Call 845-2451. Ask for Kathj 62tfi Texas Wiiliiki Home Oullel Sales and Service AT HWY. 6 ft 21 ORYAN. TEXAS 77001 • Low down payment • Local Bank financing • Up to 12 years to pay • Free delivery and set up Phone 822-9140 HELP WANTED Agstie Wives needed to serve as cafeteria line hostesses and dining: room attendants in Sbisa Dining Hall from 10:30 a. m. to 2:30 p. m. and from 4:30 p. m. to 6:30 p. m. each week day. This is an employ ment opportunity for the entire school year. See Mr. Harold Thearl, Sbisa Hall. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER I49t4 i Waiters apply Hriarcrest Country Club. Call 822-0133 -9-noon or 5-7. 148t4 Relief clerk for drive-in grocery Satur days and Sundays. Call 822-4386. 14714 Student to be alternate for Sunday paper route. Auto needed. $3.75 hour up. 846- 4088 after 6 p. m. 147t3 DO YOU WANT TO WORK? I NEED— YARDKEEPER HOUSEKEEPER NURSES AIDE OR BETTER 846-8341 146t4 Aggie wives needed to serve as cafeteria line hostesses and dining room attendants in the modern Commons dining facilities of the new Krueger-Dunn Dormitory Com plex. This is an employment opportunity for the entire school year. See Mr. Jack Ward, Commons dining area office. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. 146t4 Day students for employment in Duncan Hall from 7:30 p. m. to 10:30 p. m. See Mr. Henry Wellnitz, Duncan Dining Hall. 146t4 Attention Krueger-Dunn Residents — the new ultra-modern dining facility within the Krueger-Dunn Complex is in need of resident students to work part-time. If you are interested, please contact Mr. Jack Ward at the Commons Dining Facility. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. 146t4 Concession help. Apply Campus Theater, University Drive. 145t5 Women age 18 and older are needed to pose for part-time photographic work. No experience necessary. Wages open. Write Photography, P. O. Box 9236, College Sta tion for application. 142t8 Need 4 waitresses. Day and evening. Apply in person at 807 Texas Ave., Oak- ridge Smokehouse Restaurant. 138tfn Men or women, full or part-time. SI.80 per hour starting salary. Part-time hours can be arranged for students or housewives. Openings at both stores. Apply in person only at Whataburger No. 43, 1101 Texas Ave., Bryan. 137tfn Married student or graduate student. Evening hours. Representing NATIONAL HOME FOODS. Pleasant — good pay. 823-0869. 136tfn Redmond Terrace Drugs Phone 846-1113 1402 Hwy. 6-South College Station, Texas Prescriptions, Etc. Charge Accounts Invited Free Delivery SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 Rentals-Sales-Service TYPEWRITERS Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines Smith-Corona Portables CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 CHILD CARE Experienced babysitting in my home near campus. All ages welcomed. 846-6340. HICKORY HILLS Mobile Home Community Bryan’s Newest & Finest Spacies & Mobile Homes for rent Phone 822-6912—823-5701 2001 Beck Street Also entrance on Hwy* 2818 at Industrial Park iretfn SPECIAL NOTICE PROFITS: 30'/, & UP Show Holiday Magic Cosmetics Small Investment Call 846-2709 Evenings Graduation Invitations for December Graduates go on sale Sept. 11 - Oct. 13 at the Cashier’s Window — MSC from 8:00 - 5:0p - Mon. - Fri. 141t24 Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting Free Estimates HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave 823-8111 57tfn LOST Red Irish setter, 9 months old, no colls : Sa 846-4470. ar, name: Saul. Come by 901 Ashburn or call 146t4 WANTED ATTENTION AGGIES. Permanent em- ^ t* 5— 1- Time can be ployment. Evening arranged to meet s guaranteed after one wee 201 Varisco Bldg, betw This is a sales position. Evening work. 1 ime can ne to meet schedule, $125 per week d after one week training. Apply een 1 & 4 d. ppl: daily. 136tfn TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED From Rock & Country To Swing:! Dance Music THE BARONS AGENCY OF HOUSTON H. H. “Bud” McDaniel ’42 Box 1136, Bellaire, Texas 77101 (713) 666-0800 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call; George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 T R A V I S H O U S E FREE BUS SERVICE TO S FROM MM CAMPUS Welcome Students Children Pets FROM Dishwasher & garbage disposal All elec, kitchens 2 swimming pools 2 laundry rooms Covered parking All bills pd inc. TV Cable *140 STUDENTS $£-HQ SPECIAL Q fErfcH Ph. 846-6111 505 Hwy. 30 College Sta., Tex. erected on the ice were not un usual and the group once covered trenches in the snow with instru ment supports and tax-paulins for weather protection. The latter arrangement will keep you warm, provided you don’t get wet first,” Thompson observed. His work on the ice field con sisted of wind, temperature and dew point measurements through horizontal variations for deter mining a maritime-continental gradient across the glacier. He was also interested in general climatic data and micrometeor- logical problems. “These are simple measure ments, but very informative in regards to providing more de tails as to what happens meteor- logically on a glacier,” he said. “Long periods in the north doesn’t acclimate one to cold weather elsewhere,” Thompson observed. “I may have spent 15 months in Alaska in temperatures down to 50 degrees below zero, but I get just as cold or colder than anyone here. The air mois ture content is the difference, there it’s a dry cold.” “I’ll have to dress just as warm ly as anyone else this winter,” he commented, “and I’ll sense the cold just as easily as anyone else.” Army ROTC DMS’s Picked By BRIAN POLK One of the highest honors an Army ROTC cadet can earn is that of Distinguished Military Student. The DMS program gives outstanding Army ROTC students the opportunity to take regular Army commissions upon gradua tion. The highly competitive pro gram is designed to recognize ROTC students just as universi ties recognize students for aca demic achievement. Requirements for DMS include that a cadet must possess out standing qualities of leadership and high moral character, be in- : dined toward a military career, j and have attained high military science and academic averages. j The following cadets have been j designated Distinguished Military Students for 1972-1973: from the First Brigade are Robert G. Flesher, Juan F. Gonzales, James W. Griffith, Janie^,, F. I^elly, Layne E. Kruse, James P. Loive, Randall C. Moore, Ronald F. Pet erson, Edward F. Rumald, Mark A. De Harde, Richard B. Hall, Courtlandt P. Houchard, Ronald J. Janak, John F. Landgraf, Da vid A. McClung, Thomas D. New- some, Scott L. Tarkenton, Wil liam D. Walker and Robert L. Westholm, Jr. Second Brigade DMS cadets are: Gerald R. Betty, Duane E. Byrd, Timothy V. Coffey, Robert W. Cooper, James M. Delony, Robert E. Howard III, Stephen B. Massey, Gerald R. McMillan, Michael G. Pattillo, William R. Stuewe, Gregory P. Walk, John S. West, William A. White, Paul D. Workman, Joseph E. Carstens, James W. Collins, Stuart L. Filler, Ronald R. Fuqua, Timothy T. Griesenbeck, Max L. Knight, Lesie C. Lyons, Robery J. Miller, Joe K. Penick, David R. Phillips and Wade W. Seidel. THE Friday, September 15, 1972 BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 3 Bulletin Board Ushers for varsity football games and persons interested in becoming ushers are asked to meet in Room 232 at G. Rollie White, Sept. 19, at 5:10 p.m. The age limits are 18-65. Mam’selle tryouts will be held Sept. 19 in the MSC Ballroom at 7 p.m. Thirty girls will be chosen by a panel of judges on the bases of poise and potential. The only requirement is that girls be a student of A&M. All coeds are urged to try out. The Great Issues Committee will meet every Wednesday at 12:15 p.m. in the MSC. All mem bers must attend or call the Stu dent Programs Office by Wed nesday morning. Membership will be closed after Sept. 20. The American Institute of In dustrial Engineers will hold a meeting Sept. 19, in Lecture Room 1 of the Engineering Center. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. with Dr. Newell as guest speak er. The Port Arthur Home Town Club will meet Monday night in the MSC lobby. The meeting will be held after yell practice. The MSC Camera Committee will meet Monday in the Assem bly Room of the MSC at 8 p.m. The program will include black and white films and developers and general processing techniques. New members will be accepted and anyone interested in black and white photography is invited to attend. The Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Wives’ Club will meet Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m. at 1301 Frances Drive in College Station. The program will include a cake decorating demonstration and rides and information may be ob tained from 846-3402. Alpha Pi Mu is holding a meet ing Sept. 19 at 5 p.m. in the En gineering Center, Room 33B. All members are urged to attend for voting purposes. The Society of Physics Stu dents will meet for a demonstra tion of Holography, Sept. 20, in Room 305 of the Physics Build ing at 7:30 p.m. A Women’s Athletic Associa tion meeting will be held Sept. 19 at 5:30 p.m. at G. Rollie White in Room 232. All girls who have signed up for any intercollegiate women’s sports need to attend the meeting. The Ag Eco Club will meet next Tuesday in Rooms 112-113 of the Plant Sciences Building. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. The Biomedical Science Asso ciation will hold an organizational meeting Sept. 19 in Rooms 2A- 2B of the MSC. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. The Business Administrations Wives’ Club will meet Sept. 19, at 7:30 p.m. at the First State Bank and Trust in the Brazos Room. Wives of all graduate and undergraduate students in the College of Business Administra tion are urged to attend the “Get Acquainted Party.” For more in formation or a ride call Lynn Kinkead at 846-3074. Community Development Or ganization will meet Monday in Room 309 of the Architecture Building. The meeting will be at 6 p.m. Kidd Named Asst. Dean Associate Professor of English Harry L. Kidd has been named assistant dean of A&M’s Grad uate College, announced Gradu ate Dean George W. Kunze. Kidd, a member of the TAMU faculty for 33 years, has served since 1968 as assistant to the graduate dean in conjunction with his teaching career. He will con tinue to divide his time between the English Department and the Graduate College. Dr. Kunze said Kidd will join with Dr. Leo Berner Jr., asso ciate dean, in helping administer Graduate College programs. Kidd is the author of sevei’al short stories which have appear ed in national magazines. FRESHMEN Aggieland Picture Schedule Sept. 11-15 A-M Sept. 18-22 N - S Sept. 25-29 T - Z Oct. 2-6 Makeups Pictures will be taken from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. At UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 N. Main 846-8019 North Gate (Bring fee slips) PLAYBOY PSYCHOLOGY TODAY SATURDAY REVIEW OF: HOUSE & GARDEN 1 yr. (12 iss.) $8.50 1 yr. (12 iss.) $6.00 THE ARTS 1 yr. (12 iss.) $4.00 (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 (1 yr. Reg. $12.00 THE SOCIETY (1 yr. Reg. $7.00 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) SCIENCE 1 yr. newsstand $9.00) NEW YORKER JET c E ?Vm A I ,ON ,,o s «nn PENTHOUSE 1 yr. (52 iss. )$6.00 6 mos. (26 iss.) $5.50 , E r ach l . t i t if 1 1 yr ( P ,7m 1 V- $ 8 - 00 (1 yr. Reg. $12.00 9 mos. (38 iss.) $7.50 (Each tlt,e 1 y r - Re 8- $ 8 00) (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 1 yr. newsstand $26.00) 1 yr. (52 iss.) $10.00 NEW YORK MAGAZINE 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) APARTMENT IDEAS (1 yr Reg $12 J 0 2,o om 1 yr ‘ (52 is t> $5 ’ 00 TV GUIDE 2 yrs. (8 iss.) $3 00 1 yr newsstand $18.20) (1 yr. Reg. $8.00 2 8 iss. $2.94 (2 yrs. Reg. $5.00 BRIDE’S MAGAZINE 1 V'- newsstand $26.00) 56 iss . $5 . 88 2 yrs. newsstand $8.00) 1 yr. (8 iss.) $3.97 HARPER’S MAGAZINE (1 yr. Reg. (52 iss.) $7.00 VOGUE ^ yr- Reg. $4.00 1 yr. (12 iss.) 1 yr. newsstand $7.80) 1 yr. (20 iss.) $6.50 1 V newsstand $8.00) 8 iss. $2.84 GLAMOUR (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 READER’S DIGEST U yr. Reg. $8.50 9 m0 s. $2.65 1 yr. newsstand $15.00) 1 yr. (12 iss.) $2.50 1 yr- newsstand $12.00) (i y r . Reg. $6.00 SPORT (1 yr- Reg. $4.97 COUNTRY MUSIC 1 yr. (12 iss.) $3.50 1 yr. (12 iss.) $3.50 1 yr- newsstand $6.00 ) 1 yr. (12 iss.) $6.00 1 yr. newsstand $7.20) (1 yr. Reg. $6.00 ESQUIRE G V- newsstand $7.20 ATLANTIC MONTHLY 1 yr. newsstand $7.20) 14 iss. $5.00 (Note: New subscribers 8 mos ( 8 j ss ) $3 50 VILLAGE VOICE (1 yr. Reg. $8.50 8 et record album 1 yr (\2 jss) $5.25 1 yr. (52 iss.) $5.00 1 yr- newsstand $14.00) from publisher (i yr. Reg. $10.00 (1 yr. 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