THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1981 Page 3 Local More stores set for mall Seven national chain stores have been added to the list of merchants College Station’s Post Oak Mall still under construction. The latest stores to be announced are: Zales Jewelers, Great Hot Dog Experience, Carlyle & Co. Jewelers, Giovanni’s, Orange Julius, Motherhood Maternity and Corn Dog 7. Eugene II. Schimpf III, representative ofCBL & Associates Inc. of Chattanooga, Tenn. and project manager for the mall, announced the names of the new stores. Zales Jewelers will offer a wide selection of fine jewelry, giftware and watches, featuring diamonds. The store will open in February 1982 when the mall opens and will be one of over 830 Zales outlets in operation. Another jewelry operation, Carlyle & Co., will offer diamonds and gold jewelry and watches from such names as Cartier, Seiko and Pulsar. Motherhood Maternity will feature exclusive designer fashions for the expectant mother. The store will offer sleepwear, lingerie and n, acci»j fashions from Joyce Ewing Bradley, Lester Hayatt, Judy Loeb and bathroom other designers. •ontinued! The remaining four stores cater to shopping-time munchies. The Great Hot Dog Experience is a hot dog specialty store with a ll one-price policy and unique store design. Armour hot dogs will be toldPaleu served on poppy-seed buns with a selection of 10 different toppings at facilities J no charge. Corn Dog 7 offers two sizes of all-meat weiners, battered and fried Mule the customer watches. Side dishes include cheese on a stick, freshly squeezed lemonade and french fries. Giovanni’s will offer pizza whole or by-the-slice, fresh salad and soft Links. The last of the new outlets is Orange Julius International, a national franchise which features the Orange Julius, a blend of orange juice and it otherpr secret ingredients, or censiE e. ue ivorablei Patrick Ci Freqm s the ployeesi -annot iik ictivifc ing sport! that sucli s bathnx* igagedin intimate. 1 How of The new mall will feature seven national department stores, includ ing Sears, Dillard’s, Wilson’s and Bealls, and more than 100 smaller stores. Schimpf announced last week that Gallenkamp Shoes, Kay-BeeToy ind Hobby Shop, The Athlete’s Foot and Parklane Hosiery are plan- ping stores in the mall. He said additional stores will be announced as ease nogotiations are completed. Post Oak Mall, located on the southwest corner of the intersection if Harvey Road and the Highway 6 Bypass, is scheduled to open on February 17, 1982. Scientists fight pests threatening crops An army of scientists from 16 universities throughout the country is gone to war against weevils, worms, weeds and diseases in a jombined effort to defeat the pests that destroy millions of dollars of American agriculture every year. Supported by $9 million from the Environmental Protection Agen- and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the assault is being lirected from Texas A&M University and commanded by Dr. Perry Adkisson, deputy chancellor for agriculture of the Texas A&M Univer sity System and Dr. Ray Frisbie, the program’s executive manager. The scientists say they are looking for a combination of controls [gainst insects, weeds and plant diseases that will integrate biological gents, pest resistant plants, better farming practices and lessdepend- nce on chemical controls. "The world food crisis, compounded by the energy crisis and a genuine concern for maintaining a healthy environment, has placed an enormous stress on our agricultural system,” Frisbie said. ■ Also of concern is the dramatic increase in the use of new and exotic ■gricultural chemicals such as pesticides and fertilizers, and increases [ in the price of petroleum from which many of the chemicals are made. I “While pesticides have virtually replaced all other tactics of pest lontrol over the last 30 years, their side effects have been well re corded,” Frisbie said, “including the development of pesticide- esistant insects, the disruption of natural biological controls, health ;ards to humans, and, in some cases, irreversible effects on wildlife ind non-target organisms. ” In addition to Texas A&M, universities participating in the consor- tium include: Clemson, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Pennsylva nia State, Washington State and the universities of California, Illinois, Wisconsin, Florida, Arkansas and Kentucky. Although the development of insect strains that are resistant to chemical agents presents a severe threat to U.S. and worldwide crop iroduction, pesticides will continue to play a vital role in the emerging I ntegrated pest management (IPM) systems, Frisbie said. One objec- ■ve of the consortium is to determine how chemicals can be used within “an ecologically-based context,” he said, and to determine the ■seof minimum quantities in achieving optimum yields with a mini- ymim impact on the environment. didn t“\v c wan t to develop a system that holds pest populations below |y, the KifRrop damaging densities, is less energy dependent, economically feasi- •esolution fhle and causes the least damage to the environment,” he said. | Much of the research focuses on the management of pests attacking four major crops — cotton, alfalfa, soybean and apple. I “These crops have several things in common,” Frisbie said. lAlthough unique in their own regard, the basic methods of conduct ing research in an organizational, systematic approach to integrated nanagement can be shared and costs reduced.” Researchers involved are agronomists, agricultural economists, put breeders, meteorologists, entomologists, plant pathologists and ecd scientists. By polling federal, state and land grant university resources in learns, in collaboration with US DA scientists, the project leaders said they believe a wider variety of resources can be focused on solutions. harsh. o rebuffed ek, Deii ingthelil in fact, fori j some lugiari®, ] )-N.Y, 'gucT j., iNosingleagency or approach offers this great potential,” Frisbie said rt Byrd® The EPA funded the five-year project in September 1979, followed cally by a year of academic research and another year of hands-on research )ul(M at farms. It is presently in its second year of crop production, Frisbie • he* laid. i WO' New heart drug studied A new class of drugs called “calcium blockers promises important advancement in treating irregu lar heartbeat, high blood pressure and the often deadly chest pains that accompany angina pectoris — even though what makes the chemicals work is still somewhat of a puzzle, says a Texas A&M University medical researcher. The drugs, known more technically as antagon ists” for calcium, open the blood vessels and cause the heart to pump more evenly, said Dr. George C.Y. Chiou, head of medical pharmacology and tox icology at Texas A&M. Chiou, who conducted privately funded research on calcium blockers in the past, said the chemicals act to block tbe influx of calcium into heart cells, an essential ingredient to the pumping of the heart. The abnormal influx of calcium leads to arrhythmia — an irregular heart beat — which can be prevented by calcium antagonists, Chiou said. Calcium blockers show great promise in treating angina, a frequently fatal condition marked by severe chest pain caused by the blocking of oxygen-rich blood needed by the heart, he said. Calcium blockers, he said, relax the coronary arteries to supply sufficient oxygen and nutrients to the heart so that the risky surgery can be avoided. Study could save sea turtles A sea turtle’s instinct to return to its birthplace to breed may be triggered by hormones reacting to the amount of sunlight received each day, says a Texas A&M Uni versity marine biologist. Dr. David Owens, who has stu died reproductive systems of nearly extinct Atlantic Ridley tur tles for two years for the Texas A&M Sea Grant College Program, believes the photoperiod could help turtles identify the beaches there they were hatched. Photoperiod — the proportion of sunlight each day that affects the growth of an organism — has been proven an important cue in the mating of birds, mammals and fish. So, Owens says, it seems like ly the same thing could occur in large reptiles. He believes the key may lie in the secretion of the hormone melatonin (usually associated with changes in skin pigment) by the pineal gland which rests between the turtle’s eyes and brain. The pineal region of sea turtles is among the largest of any verte brate, said Owens, and his recent findings suggest a link between biological rhythms such as those triggered by the photoperiod and reproduction. His studies at Texas A&M show a definite day-night pattern in melatonin secretion among loggerhead and green sea turtles. “The pineal body could provide the sea turtle with a system to translate the length of day into a endocrine-based biological clock,” said Owens. Turning the lights on in his lab during the night produced a sharp drop in melato nin secretions from the turtles, in dicating their pineal system is light-sensitive, he said. Owens said his theory would give sea turtles advantages over the more widely accepted water temperature cues. “The thermal environment of an inshore marine animal is going to vary even locally to a consider able degree from year-to-year, de pending on rain, currents and wa ter depth. The photoperiod sys tem or ‘inner clock’ would be very regular on the other hand,” he ex plained. In any case, he explained, the system is highly seasonal. “Turtles have a tendency to stop whatever else they are doing when the time for reproduction comes along,” he said. Basic studies like the one at Texas A&M may help the embat tled Atlantic Ridley sea turtle sur vive. There are now fewer than 350 female Atlantic Ridleys and the entire population is estimated at less than 2,000. You Get What You Pay For. 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