Battalion/Page 5 April 6, 1982 local / state Scientist honored for insect research Warped By Scott McCullar EXIT-v WAS ONCty BUT IS NO LONGER, AN IT. IFOIBLE-n A SMALL WEAK- NESS, SOMETIMES OVEN TEMPERED FOR FLEXIBLE STRENGTH (EXAMPLE-AS IJY ALUMINUM -FOIBLE) £ENEAL0_&y-h A CHART OR A RECORDED HISTORY OF THE DESCENT OF BEINGS THAT LIVE IN MA&IC LAMPS. PERVERT- THE AMOUNT EACH VERT GETS. by Kelli Proctor Battalion Reporter Dr. Perry Adkisson, deputy thancellor for agriculture for the Texas A&M University Sys tem, has been named 1982 Dis tinguished Texas Scientist by |he Texas Academy of Sciences. Adkisson recently received the award in recognition of his vork in insect biology and de- teloping pest management sys tems for cotton growers. For instance, some of his stu- jies revealed that the length of [he day was a major controlling jfactor in the reproductive cycle bf insects which explains why jthey are reproductively dor- lant in fall and active in the Spring. Adkisson is only the third person to receive the award. Adkisson was elected in 1979 to the National Academy of Scien ces, an organization chartered by the U.S. Congress to provide advice to the president and Con gress on scientific matters and problems. “It is the most prestigous sci entific group in the United States and election to member ship is considered the highest honor you can achieve,” Adkis son said. Adkisson received his bache lor’s degree in agriculture from the University of Arkansas and his master’s degree in agronomy also from Arkansas. He received his doctorate from Kansas State University in entomology and did post doctorate research in insect physiology at Harvard University. In 1958, Adkisson came to Texas A&M as assistant profes sor and a project leader in cotton research. He was promoted in 1979 to deputy chancellor of agriculture after serving as head of the entomology department and vice president for agricul ture. As deputy chancellor for agri- culture, he oversees and coor dinates activities of all agricul ture agencies and services for the System, Adkisson said. High court strikes down paternity suit time limit exas supplies water to an Arkansas town United Press International TEXARKANA, Ark. — Tex ans may have to fight for Arkan- Psas water to keep their farms jlush and fertile in the dry west- plains, but Arkansas has leen quietly siphoning water om Texas since 1928. The joint water department j§f Texarkana, Tex., and Texar- lana, Ark., uses about 60 million aliens of water a day from fright Patman Lake, about 10 fitiles west of the Arkansas- |Texas border. 1 “We’ve chuckled about it, but haven’t raised any flags over it,” Sharp said.‘W id peorge Bashaih, an attor- u dose " ney for the Texas Department Buck Floren|p f Wa^r Resources I he cities struck the water greement in 1894 and first sed water from wells in Arkan- Butin 1928, they switched to lakes in Texas and have been staff photo by Colinli e greenhouse, orse ernoi Springs, saidTei in on White in tel istrict. ny area, Marl it with a big lead ig, but the qua® ;1 is diminishing;!!! .■r.stand that Mari' all things to all ; said. “Buddy Ti g ground rapid!' said Temples most active in ll a. , Florence and minders, D-Laft three of the ID apitol news conte iob Armstrong hoice in the go' tsing Wright Patman Lake wa ter since 1957. Texarkana, Ark., pays for the reatment of water used by its lesidents — about 40 percent of te cost last year — but other wise, the water from Texas is free. Records show the mayors of the two Texarkanas worked together to get the first state per mit to use Texas lake water, Basham said. Selling* water to Arkansas irobably was contemplated all ong,” he said. “There’s no leg al impediment under the water code. And we, as an agency, have no problem with it.” Roger Ford, director of the joint Texarkana water depart ment, said he also knows of no one upset about the arrange ment, but he is getting uneasy. “This puts Texarkana in a very uncomfortable position,” Ford said. “We don’t want our water resources and our future water supply to become part of the political situation.” Texas Gov. William Clements has been boasting for more than a year that Texas will “steal” wa* ter from Arkansas when the Ogallala Aquifer under Texas runs dry. The Arkansas Legislature tried to dissuade Clements last year by passing a law forbidding the export of more than six gal lons of Arkansas water at a time. But Clements has continued to assure Texas audiences that Arkansas — and specifically Arkansas Gov. Frank White — will be willing to sell water to Texas. One serious study proposed building large canals from Arkansas to West Texas. Less se rious Arkansas planners have suggested trading water for oil — barrel for barrel. Ford said Texarkana is work ing on a plan to get water from Millwood Lake, directly north of Texarkana in Arkansas. But building a reservoir and distri bution system would be a mas sive undertaking, and Texarka na will have to depend on Wright Patman Lake in the meantime. Without it, Ford said: “If we needed water right now, we'd. have to wait almost 60 years be fore we got a drop.” United Press International WASHINGTON —The Sup reme Court ruled unanimously Monday that the father of an illegitimate child cannot escape paying child support merely be cause the one-year time period for filing suit against him has lapsed. Tackling the sensitive legal issue of paternity suits, the jus tices struck down a Texas law requiring an unwed mother to sue the purported father during the first year of her illegitimate child’s life. Under the Texas statute, once a child’s first birthday has passed, women cannot pursue such suits, which generally are filed for child support pay ments. Writing for the court, Justice William Rehnquist concluded illegitimate children must have the same opportunity for obtaining financial support from a parent as legitimate chil dren. “By granting illegitimate chil dren only one year in which to establish paternity, Texas has failed to provide them with an adequate opportunity to obtain support,” Rehnquist said. He stressed an unwed mother is in a particularly tough situa tion during her child’s first year of life as a result of “financial difficulties caused by child-birth expenses, continuing affection for the child’s father, a desire to avoid dissapproval of family and community, or the emotional strain and confusion that often attend the birth of an illegiti mate child.” Texas officials argued the one-year limit was needed to prevent misuse of the legal pro cess and because an alleged father may have a difficult time presenting evidence on his own behalf long after a child’s birth. But Rehnquist declared the 12-month time frame “denies illegitimate children in Texas the equal protection of the law.” The court did not say specific ally how long a period a state must allow for filing paternity suits, but indicated it must be substantially longer than one year. The appeal was brought by Lois Mae Mills of Sinton. She challenged a state court ruling that threw out her paternity case against Dan Habluetzel. State courts refused to hear Mills’ arguments because she filed the case when her child was 13 months. Noting the Supreme Court previously had accorded num erous rights to illegitimate chil dren, Mills told the justices: “These rights are currently meaningless to a substantial class of illegitimate children in Texas by virtue of the one-year statute of limitations in paternity cases.” GIEY yOGIE YIICIGIEYS NOW ullock says Texans must pick programs jim RuM >ld; Dick Burns relo; John Ga'i Falls; Elton Bo# s repi'esentativeF- I emple WCIC Hljjr United Press International dton; Hamp All I AUSTIN — Comptroller Bob Boston; Bill Hal ^Bullock estimated Monday that Texas will lose $650 million be- ause of federal budget cuts and ailed on state and local author- rcuis, — ™hes to decide which federal i; and Charlie tfprograms they want to start paying for. [ “The 1983 budget the presi dent has submitted to Congress proposes eliminating and trim- ; ming hundreds of programs Uncle Sam has been paying for,” Bullock said. “As best I can tell, these cuts will mean about $150 | million less in social services and not more than half a billion dol lars less in grant funds for Texas.” 2 /sq Bullock said some of the Ml funding cuts probably would be restored by Congress. He also said Texas could afford to pay r or the “best” of the programs, possibly without a tax cut. Bullock said Texas only gets $1 in federal grants for every $ 1.40 Texans pay to support the grants. “We can keep that money at home and use it more efficient ly,” Bullock said. “And we can probably meet the needs of our students, the poor and needy without a tax increase since we can still depend on the federal government to spend more de fense dollars for products made in Texas and to keep mailing So cial Security checks to Texans.” DIETING? 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