The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 02, 1956, Image 5

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    Plant Protection School
lias International Touch
The third Industrial Plant Px-o-
tection School to be held here Feb.
6-11, will take on an international
flavor. Industrial plant protection
jjersonnel fi'om all over Texas,
many states and foreign countries
will attend.
The school will be conducted by
the Engineering Extension Service
in cooperation with the Texas Ed
ucation Agency and is sponsored
by the Ixxdustrial Plant Protection
Association of Texas.
One of the instructors will be
an industrialist from Venezuela.
Purpose of the school is to pio-
vide plant protection personnel
with practical, down-to-earth train
ing in all pi’actices and procedures
related to plant security; to help
instill in those attending a firm
knowledge of the basic fundamen
tals of their job.
Mox - e than 55 topics will be cov-
exx'd. Among the topics ai - e xe-
sponsibilities and duties of plant
officers, patrol activities and xela-
ted problems and others.
Cape buffaloes are Africa’s most
deadly and vindictive animals, says
the National Geographic Society.
Wounded, they have been known
to ambush hunters. Not content
with killing their victims, they
trample them with ax-sharp, hoofs.
Fred A. Wolters
Leaves A&M System
These Values Good Today thru Saturday in our Bryan Store,
1010 South College, at Pease
Top Spread Golden
MARGARINE 2 3 3
WEINGAKTEN’S CHOICE BONDED BEEF
Sq. Cut Shoulder
ROAST
Bond Beef,
U-S. Choice LB.
35c
Bonded Beef
ROUND STEAK .... lb. 59c
Beef Roast
ENGLISH CUT .... lb. 45c
Boneless Beef
STEW MEAT lb. 49c
FANCY CENTRAL AMERICAN
BANANAS ib lO
U.S. No. 1 California—JUMBO * I Sweet Meat—FRESH
LEMONS .... 12 for 39c COCONUTS ... 2 for 15c
-HORMEL “NO WASTE” READY TO EAT
Lb. Can $ * 39
2
PICNICS 4
Wisconsin Tastv
CHEDDAR CHEESE . . . . lb. 49c
TWO 7-INCH LAYER CAKE
STRAWBERRY DELIGHT
Two 7-inch layers filled with strawberry butter cream covered on
the outside with strawberry jam ~~
59
DRUG & CANDY SPECIAL
60 Tablets—79c Size
BUFFERIN
For quick relief a
of headaches
Extra Special
HEART BOX
Assorted hand dipped and 1 LB. BOX
hand rolled milk and dark QOr*
chocolate ^covered creams
Bargains Gatore Ail Over Our Store!
Wolters Leaves
Ag Exp Station
Fred A. Wolters, who for the
past seven years has been associa
ted with the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station here, has left
the A&M System to take a posi
tion with the Texas Prison System.
He will be assistant to Byron
Frierson, who is in charge of ag
riculture for the Pi’ison System,
with headquarters at Sugar! and.
Wolters will work primarily with
marketing of agricultural products
produced by the Pxison System.
He was very active while here,
being associated with the Former
Students Association and presi
dent of the Brazos County A&M
Club in 1954. A veteran of Woxdd
War II with service in the Philip
pines, he now holds the rank of
major in the Organized Reserve
Corps.
The Wolters have four children.
AH Professors
Serve As Judges
Two members of the Animal Hus
bandry Department served a s
judges in the recent Lampasas
County Fair.
They wex-e Di\ J. C. Miller, head
of the department, and J. W. Gos
sett. Dr. Miller then went to Fort
Woxth to pai'ticipate in a meeting
of the State Livestock Brucellosis
Committee.
The Lampasas County Fair, in
which both judged in the junior
livestock show section, includes
fat steel’s, breeding heifers, fat
lambs, breeding - ewes, fat barrows,
bred boars and bred gilts, making
it one of the larger county shows
in thp state.
Robert Fulton’s steamboat,
“Clermont,” began regular service
in 1807.
Thursday, February 2, 1956
"THE BATTALION'
Page 5
This Survey Did Not
Include Texas A&M
Hogs Nip TCU; Tie
There’s quite a gap between the
ideal campus beauty queen and
the average American woman, as
statistics depict her.
So it seems, at least, to Jerra
Lynne Tyler, this year’s Helen, of
Troy at the University of South-
ei - n California.
For when Jerra Lynne matched
her own dimensions against those
reported by Henry Dreyfuss, one
of the nation’s foremost industrial
designers, in his best-selling book.
“Designing for People,” she found
that she was far from “average.”
The Dreyfuss typical figure,
which was developed after years
of reseai’ch and which serves ass
the model for the scoi'es of pro
ducts he designs, is five feet, thx - ee
inches tall, and has a 39-inch hip
spread, a 35-inch bust and a 29-
inch waist.
Compared with her, Jerra Lynne
towers to five feet, six inches, and
measures 36 inches, in the hips,
36 in the bust and 25 in the waist.
A junior at USC and a major in
business administration, she ad
mits that she’s not one bit envious
of this mythical average woman
Designer Dreyfuss has conjured
up and christened “Josephine.”
In the course of his research,
which involved the collaboration
of ear doctors, neurologists, psy
chologists and opticians, Dreyfuss
found fhat three and eight-tenths
per cent of American women are
Kurnick
(Continued from Page 4)
ceived a master of science degree
in biochemistry and nutrition in
1955.
His award was made on the basis
of outstanding scholai'ship recoi'd
and potential importance of the
work to be done.
left-handed, two-tenths of one per
cent are color blind, four and one-
half per cent are hard of hearing,
and fifty-six and four tenths per
cent wear glasses.
Jerra Lynne pleads “not guilty”
on all scores.
But the Dreyfuss average wo
man, although she may win no
beauty contests, has proved im
measurably useful to the industrial
designer as the target consumer
for whom he designs everything
from telephone head sets to the in
teriors of hotel rooms.
Ponies For Lead
FORT WORTH—-(/P)—Arkansas’
cagers remained unbeaten in the
Southwestern Confei-ence play
here last night and pulled back
into a tie for the lead with South
ern Methodist on a 74-72 victory
over Texas Christian.
The Ponies and Porkers have
5-0 league records and will meet
Saturday night at Fayetteville,
Ax - k., for temporary settlement of
the dispute.
Arkansas’s verdict over the
Frogs wasn’t so close as the score
indicates, but the final gun nip
ped a threatening TCU comeback.
QUICK WAY TO BETTER TASTE: It’s illustrated
in the Droodle above, titled: Lucky smoker
opening fresh pack. (He’s merely doing away
with a little red tape.) Better taste is what
he’s after, and better taste is what he’ll get.
Luckies taste better, you see, because they’re
made of fine tobacco . . . light, mild tobacco
that’s TOASTED to taste better. Break out
a pack of Luckies yourself. You’ll say Lucky
Strike is the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!
DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price
T FORMATION
Peter Sarant
U. of Maryland
ESKIMO RANCH HOUSE
(SPLIT-LEVEL)
John Dorritie
Iona
TOWER OF LONDON
AS SEEN BY ENGLISH
SHEEP DOG
James Hanley
Holy Cross
,'rr-b roAsreo
COLLEGE
SMOKERS
PREFER
LUCKIES!
Luckies lead all other
brands, regular or king size,
among 36,075 college stu
dents questioned coast to
coast. The number-one rea
son: Luckies taste better
*■■■ mb mmmmmmrnmmmmm
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner. Fresher. Smoother!
©A.T.Co. PRODUCT OF
America’s leading
MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES
NEW STUDENTS - ASK ABOUT LOU S
“Where Aggies Trade"’
(A 30 DAY RETURN PRIVILEGE)