Cuttlefish’* Camouflage A cuttlefish can change its color in two-thirds of a sec ond. If this camouflage fails, it screens itself with a brownish-black ink. gaemwoMOwao******: Associate Penn State Ag Dean Named Outstanding Educator Jerome K. Pasto, associate dean for resident education in the HRI ¥. * O Fulton Bank will add something extra to your Christmas Club check next November—4%% average interest—if you complete all your payments. An extra “Merry Christmas” bonus to all our Christmas Club savers. Join a Fulton Christmas Club now—there’s a lot of interest in it for you. You may open a Club for as little as $l.OO bi-weekly. FULTON BANK SERVING LANCASTER AND DAUPHIN COUNTIES College of Agriculture at Penn sylvania State University, has been named one of 1971’s “Outstanding Educators of America” for contributions to higher education. The selection was announced by the board of directors of Outstanding Educators of America, Chicago. Dr. Pasto received a certificate and his biography will appear in the 1971 volume of the association. In 1962, Dr. Pasto was named associate director of resident education for the College of Agriculture and associate dean in 1968. He has worked with the faculty and departments in modernizing agricultural curricula. New four-year majors include animal science, animal industry, food science, plant science, and environmental resource management. New associate degree majors include agricultural business, initiated in 1964, and wildlife technology in 1969. While not directly responsible for graduate study, Dr. Pasto has encouraged development of graduate programs. Doctor of philosophy programs have been added in forest resources, food science, agricultural engineering, and veterinary science. Masters degree join the SIMAS Member Federal Reserve Syslem/F D I C * • * * B •• Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 4,1971 programs also have been added in food science and veterinary science. With a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, he initiated this year a “grad-op” program to enable black students to pursue graduate studies in the College. The grant supports the students while they stengthen their academic backgrounds. He has also encouraged in novative instruction such as use thier academic backgrounds, of telecture and computers Dr. Pasto has been a member of the University Senate and has served on a number of com mittees. At the national level he served in 1969 as chairman of the Resident Instruction Section, Division of Agriculture, of the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges, Prior to that he was chairman of the policy com mittee of the section. He con tinues as a member and secretary of the legislature committee of the Divison of Agriculture. He served on a committee USDA Changing Poultry Inspection Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Richard Lyng said recently that a reorganization of I I I I I 1 A FULL SERVICE vBANK/ studying technical training in agriculture and natural resources, as appointed by the Commission on Education in Agriculture and Natural Resources, National Academy of Sciences. Currently he is on a national committee to study the status of computer use in agricultural instruction. Dr. Pasto completed his doc toral work at Cornell University in 1950 and then joined the faculty of the department of agricultural economics and rural sociology at Penn State. He is a senior member of the graduate faculty and the author of over 60 articles, Experiment Station bulletins, progress reports, and other publications. Dr. Pasto spent 1967 to 1969 with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations as a production economist, traveling widely in Asia and the Far East. In 1960 he headed a 3-man exploratory mission to Venezuela for the Pan- American Union to study agricultural potential in the Andean lowlands. the ' U.S. Department of Agriculture’s meat and poultry inspection program, now nearing completion, is the key to correcting poultry plant sanitation deficiencies discovered by the General Ac counting Office early this year. Lyng explained that the new organizational structure in corporates many of the recom mendations of the GAO, and more clearly defines specific responsibilities for sanitation enforcement, from Washington headquarters to each of the some 4,000 meat and poultry plants operating under federal in spection. USDA said the reorganization was begun in November of last year after a thorough examination of the inspection program by USDA personnel and an independent management consultant team. This examination, USDA said, disclosed the need for better supervision at all levels of the program. 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