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  1. James Jarrell "Jake" Pickle (October 11, 1913 – June 18, 2005) was a United States Representative from the 10th congressional district of Texas from 1963 to 1995. Early life. Pickle was born in Roscoe, Texas, and brought up in Big Spring. [1] .

  2. The J. J. Pickle Research Campus ( PRC) in Austin, Texas, United States is owned and operated by the University of Texas at Austin. It sits on 475 acres (1.9 km 2) in northwest Austin, approximately 9 miles (14 km) north of the main UT campus and just south of the Domain .

  3. At the Brackenridge Field Lab and Stengl Lost Pines students and researchers study the interactions between life and the land. Meanwhile, the Center supports millions of specimens in its Biodiversity Collections housed at the Lake Austin Center, J.J. Pickle, and more. Learn more.

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  4. For a guy named pickle, his legacy in town (Austin) is huge. Aside from the Federal building being named after him, the JJ Pickle Research Campus hosts a nuclear reactor, a hypersonic wind tunnel, a top 10 supercomputer, and a railgun under development for the US Navy.

  5. Mar 1, 1995 · The J. J. Pickle Research Campus of the University of Texas at Austin, formerly the Balcones Research Center, is located on a Missouri Pacific Railroad spur at a 475-acre site in the northwest part of Austin.

  6. The J.J. Pickle Research Campus (PRC), known to many but still somehow steeped in mystery, began as a magnesium processing plant during World War II before being purchased by the university in 1949.

  7. Mike Chapman’s post on Jake Pickle bought back several memories of Austin’s US Representative from 1963-1995. Mr. Pickle changed Austin’s landscape. He steered money to the University of Texas, and today the University’s J.J. Pickle Research Campus is named in his honor.