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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1975)
Former MIT prof joins TAMU; ioengineering gets food expert Dr. Dewey D. Y. Ryu, formerly visiting associate professor of chem ical and biochemical engineering at dIT, has joined the TAMU bioen- 'ineering program. Dr. Ryu has basic and applied re- ;earch interest in biochemical (in- I eluding fermentation and enzyme), I aiomedical, pharmaceutical and food engineering, and has con ducted extensive studies on fermen- ation and enzyme engineering | problems. Reorganized and taught the first enzyme engineering course at MIT and assisted in setting up the biochemical engineering program at Rutgers. Recently, Dr. Ryu helped the Korea Advanced Institute of Sci ence (a unique academic institution devoted to graduate level education and research that is especially tail ored to the national needs) to or ganize a bioengineering program that encompasses biochemical, en zyme, food environmental, phar maceutical and biomedical en gineering studies. Dr. Ryu s appointments to date have included: the Squibb Institute for Medical Research as a senior re search engineer; Rutgers Univer sity as an adjunct professor of chem ical and biochemical engineering; Stanford University as a faculty fel low; Institute de Technologia de Alimentos (Brazil) as a visiting pro fessor; and the Korea Advanced In stitute of Science as chairman and visiting professor in the Depart ment of Bioengineering. Additionally, he has been a con sultant to Sobering Corporation, Squibb Corporation, New Bruns wick Scientific Company, Toyo Jozo (Japan), and Lucky Chemical Com pany (Korea). Dr. Ryu holds membership in the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science, American Society for Microbiology, American Chemical Society, the American In stitute of Chemical Engineers and Institute of Food Technologists. " —«r> Wm lift Dr. Dewey D. Y. Ryu THE BATTALION Page 13 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1975 Socialism threatens, warns former student Federal Trade Commissioner Mayo Thompson claims that unless the economy “straightened out” he feared America could drift into socialism with a highly-regulated market. Thompson, a 1941 TAMU graduate, made the remarks during the opening of a three-week Execu tive Development Course at Aggie- land. President-elect of the PtCCLY WfCClfS PRICING POLICY. ...One* a can or package it pricemarked, wc w! not rase it s price. ..When are are forced to increase a price, items on our shebes marked at a lower price wi be sold at the tower price. ..When we reduce a price, the stock on the shakes wi be reduced and sold at the lower price. ..When a can or package contains more than one price, you pay the lower price. Shop PtGGLY WIGGLY and WIN. SIRLOIN STEAK 39 Swiff Pmten Heavy Beef ■l¥s£J oiDTirm IJUOnDCRFUl OBU GIFT/ WITH S&H C&fttn STrtmPS SHOP AT PlfcCIV MGCtV BEEF PATTIES SuperTasfe $ftfQ 16 oz. pkg. | T-BONE STEAK 'iff Proten £0 avy Beef ft. | HAM ROAST 09 tyffifoodmcesareffojofo. Mats w/iy l/a/ue -Pr/c/ng /s serious /business with us/ tecordtng * your yuitkau each fim you tl*p if your friooJf PlffLy MHlf 9tro. PlttHLY WHHILY STAMP DIVIDE HD Neuhoffs Center Cut TENNESSEE FARM PURE PORK SAUSAGE Neuhoffs Reg. or Hot \ lb. pkg. BUTT HALF INHOLE SMOKED ■HAMS! SMOKED IHAMSl greem STAMPS J FAMILY PACK W if A qtPP ONiyA 89* FRYERS SMOKED contains i 3 breast portions Si 3 tea portent with bocks I 3 wings , plus gilett. HAMS Hi green STAMPS , FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT SPECIALS NIBLET CORN Green pent . .2 pfe/' BANQUET DINNERS'i 0! A9 * _ perch, beef, ham pKg- 11 ORANGE MCE. .Seald Sweet £ 6 oz. cans *1 BABY OKRA W'M'y ^ole 16 oz. pkg. ^9 ^ Neuhoffs Sliced ■'■faifr* m Neuhoff s Shank .Portion CALIFORNIA] Inavelii [ORANGES SlAB BACON LINK SAUSAGE ^' s ^ rmn ^ $ em FRANKS BONELESS HAM LITTLE SIZZLERS HomeTs Link Sausage. POLISH SAUSAGE # HomeTs. Smoked Kolbase . FISH STICKS . . . ? orfo / s Fmen LONG HORN CHEESE,/ lb. $ |09 8 ° z - piy- 39 * 12 oz. pkg. 59 $ /^2 29 12 oz. pkg. p. 12 oz. /%*|29 9 oz - 68^ Wot. pkg. gj: YAMS East Texas Centennial • • • ♦ CALIFORNIA SUNKLST TANGERINES. .. MEXICO CRYSTAL WAXED ONIONS.... FULL OF JUICE LARGE SIZE mm LEMONS AVOCADOS . c £,7eocb 25 * PASCAL CELERY. lb. bag lb. each California . Stalk. r US#1 COLORADO™^^ , russet'} [POTATOES^ delicious^ FLORIDA 6 oz. cello pkg. Heinz Tomato KETCHUP WAFFERS B.8.Q. SAUCE DILL PICKLES. CASCADE Dishwasher Detergent 14 oz. bH. Sunshine Vanilla Kraft Vlasic 'Chips r Hamburger. CHEEZ WHIZ . “ . . . s f59 BREAKFAST , Ca ™ tion t lnst f ^ 6 , ct , 79 TOMATO PASTE ."/ . .4 1:1 D06 FOOD, “ 5 ^ . . 5^1 VELVEETA Kraft Processed Cheese ^ DISCOUNT HEALTH AND BEAUTY AID SPECIALS. S TL; ■ riS. CAMPHO-PHENIQUE. . *.««•« 89* LAVORIS . Mouthwash * Us* Price V 5 j^z. bH. $ j09 ^ SHOWBOAT DIET FOOD p/GGLY INIGGLY [PORK & || 11 APPLE 1 BEANS SE60 SAUCE yihiiaji Double fisH Green fitamps every Tuesday with^Z^oi more pmch 880 THESE PRICES GOOD THURS., FRI, SAT. JAN. 30, 3!, & FEB. 1, 197$ 4 FINE STORES TO SERVE YOU * 4300 TEXAS AYE. * 3516 TEXAS AYE. * 200 E. 244i ST. * *9 Redmond Terrace COLLEGE STATION BRYAN TEXAS Quantity R^kts Reserved 65,000-member TAMU Association of Former Students, the commis sioner also proposed labor unions be barred from representing workers of more than one company, noting that 75 per cent of American emp loyees are not union members. Thompson, one of five commis sioners who share responsibility for enforcing antitrust laws, remarked that unless the free enterprise sys tem was allowed to work to the ful lest, the ship of the economy might drift onto the rocks of socialism. This included backing elected of ficials who favor free markets, he said. Human relations, awareness of various outside forces, current con cepts and free interchange of ideas are all reviewed in the concentrated course, says B. J. Adams, program director. The course is being hosted by the College of Business Administration and Office of Continuing Educa tion. TCLU says rape bills hit freedom AUSTIN (AP) — The Texas Civil Liberties Union said Monday that pending hills in the legislature that attempt to protect the privacy of a rape victim would violate basic rights of the accused and abridge the freedom of speech and press. “The right of privacy for a victim of a crime is important,” said a statement from John B. Duncan, executive director of the TCLU, “However, that right pales in com parison to the rights of an accused person to due process in all proceed ings where the state is attempting to deny that person liberty.” Duncan said the bills, one in the House and the other in the Senate, “attempt to legislate relevancy and admissability of evidence in rape trials by limiting questions about the accuser-victim’s sexual con duct. He said this deprives the ac cused of an unlimited Sixth Amendment right to confront and be confronted by the witnesses against him. Another part of the bills would allow the court to determine which representatives of the press would be allowed in the courtroom while the accuser-victim testifies and would prohibit the press from re porting the name of the accuser- victim in most cases. “Both of these provisions violate the First Amendment provision that Con gress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press,’ Duncan said. Safe tires goal of new project Techniques developed for im proving solid fuel for rockets and designing the Apollo heat shield are being applied by TAMU resear chers to the study of skid charac teristics of tires. “We re hoping by the time the project is over to be able to predict the influence of tire properties, con struction and road surface texture on the skidding behavior of autos during wet weather,” explained Dr. Richard A. Schapery of the Texas Engineering Experiment Station. “The objective is to develop a model of what is happening bet ween the tire and the pavement,” Dr. Schapery went on. “This we will couple to a vehicle dynamics model which will let the highway engineer determine under what conditions loss of control in a car occurs. “If we can figure out the relation between cornering, wet pavement and high vehicle speed, we’ll be able to produce pavement and tires that will provide greater friction which means greater control of the auto.” Their task will include develop ment of a computer simulation of the tire-pavement interaction for a single tire. The computer results will then be compared with full scale tests to verify the simulation. Country Stampede Night Ionite Jan. 29 at the new Fiesta Ballroom Groesbeck Rd. & Palasota Music by The Ramrods 8 p.m.—12 a.m. LADIES FREE Beer Available ALL MAGGIES & AGGIES WELCOMED