The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 03, 1957, Image 2

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The Battation College Station (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Friday, May 3, 1957
Welcome, FFA
Tomorrow A&M will have the privilege of acting as
host for 1,100 Future Farmers of America from all over the
state. The boys will be competing for outstanding judging
teams in Texas.
This opportunity is one of many afforded these young
men who have aspirations to feed the country’s millions in
future years. No amount of work and planning should be
overlooked in training .them to be the kind of farmers our
nation needs.
Someone has said that no organization for young men
besides the Boy Scouts does a better job of building better
citizens than the FFA.
Whether or not this is true depends largely on efforts
such as are being made tomorrow and similar efforts being
made throughout the FFA program.
Welcome to Aggieland, Future Farmers! We’re proud
to aid in your training and progress in the field of agricul
ture.
Learn the Issues
Wednesday has been set as the date for voting on wheth
er or not Corps and Civilian students will be seated together
in reserved seats at Kyle Field.
Student senators have planned what seems to be a good
method of getting over to students just what the issues are
in the plan, yet probably few students will appear at the
debate scheduled in G. Rollie White Cloiseum, Tuesday at
5 p.m. to find out what they’ll be voting for.
If such debates as this and publication of the issues
don’t increase student interest in campus issues and activi
ties, what will?
It’s time to end an apparent feeling of indifference on the
part of many students. An individual who doesn’t attend
this debate or find out in some way what the issues are will
be the one who is absent from the polls. When the votes
are counted and he doesn’t like the outcome, his cries will be
loud and long.
The only way to avoid such happenings and actually
“pitch in” with interest is for every Aggie to make a spe
cial effort to learn the issues and in turn vote his convictions.
STUDENT SENATORS
(Continued from Page 1)
Agency, of Brownsville. The area
claims office is with Montgomery
and Collins, Dallas.
“We will need at least 2,250 stu
dents buying the policy to make
it go over,’ said Joe David Ross,
chairman of the Insurance Com
mittee. “But I believe many more
than that will take advantage of
the plan.”
Exact benefits of the policy in
clude $1,000 for accidental death,
$1,000 dismemberment (100% bene
fits including permanent total dis
ablement) and $500 or $1,000 med
ical reimbursement. The fee of
$3.15 includes all taxes and may
be paid before, or at registration
for the fall semester.
Debate and election plans for in
tegration and reserved seating for
football games next fall was also
discussed at length by Senate mem
bers. A debate is to held next
Tuesday at 5 p.m. in G. Rollie
White Coliseum. Teams represe-
Three A&S Awards
Planned Monday
Three faculty members of the
School of Arts and Sciences will
re c e i v e Faculty Appreciation
Awards at the Monday meeting of
the Arts and Sciences Council, ac
cording to W. H. Delaplane, dean.
The names of the three men will
not be announced until the Monday
meeting of the council, he said.
Presentation of keys to each of
the council members will also take
place at the meeting. Further Op
en House Plans will be discussed if
the council members deem it neces
sary.
Bark is now being converted
into an inexpensive soil builder by
the Illinois Institute of Technol
ogy. i •«
senting both the “pro” and “con”
sides of the integration question
will debate to give students a
chance to know what they are vot
ing for.
According to Joe David Ross, a
member of the “pro” integration
team, two questions will be dis
cussed in the debate. The first
question is whether or not seats
should be reserved for students and
the second is, if the seats are re
served, should the seating arrange
ment be integrated to include both
Corps and Civilian students.
Ross stressed that just because
a student voted for reserved seat
ing, It did not mean the seating
would be integrated. The reserved
seating plan and integration plans
are two separate questions.
John Specht and Ross will lead
the cause for reserved seating and
integration in the debate. Both
are senior Senators. The leaders
to oppose them have not been ap
pointed as yet.
After a discussion on whether
a student who is not a member of
the senate should be allowed to
debate on each team, senators voted
against it, 13-11.
Piper invited all students to
hear the debate. He said he felt
is was better that the debate par
ticipation was confined to Senate
members.
“We are interested in showing
the students what we have tried to
do and how we feel about the mat
ter, and I think they should see the
senators they selected argue the
case,” Piper said.
The student election next Wed
nesday in the Memorial Student
Center will determine the seating
and integration question. The de
bate is to give students a better
idea of just what they are voting
for and the good and bad points
of each side of the question.
Sunny Sue Carpenter
Day Students
Bettie Beasley
Miss Mitchell Hall
Lynn A. Farmer
College View
Jeanene Stein
College View
Benita Williams
College View
More Civilian Sweetheart Finalists
Thursday Banquet Honors
Aggie FFA Students, Profs
HOLDING TWO registered Herefords which will be entered in the Little Southwestern
Livestock Show and Ham Sale is Bobby Rankin. The animal on the left is a bull and on
the right a heifer.
The Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views" of the Student Editors
The Battalion, dally newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas and the City of College Station, Is published by students In the Office of Student
Publications as a non-profit educational service. The Director of Student Publications
Is Ross Strader. The governing body of all student publications of the A.&M. College
of Texas is the Student Publications Board. Faculty members are Dr. Carroll D.
Laverty. Chairman; Prof. Donald D. Burchard, Prof. Tom Leland and Mr. Bennie
Zinn. Student members are W. T. Williams, Murray Milner, Jr., and Leighlus E.
Sheppard, Jr., Ex-officio members are Mr; Charles Koeber, and Ross Strader, Sec
retary. The Battalion is published four times a week during the regular school year
and once a week during the summer and vacation and examination periods. Days of
publication are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year and on Thursday
during the summer terms and during examination and vacation periods. Subscription
rates are $3.50 per semester, $6.00 per school year, $6.50 per full year or $1.00
per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
AH Students Get Chance
To Combine Practice, Theory
lobs In All Ag
Number About
The common conception of col- largest and most active student
Fortv Percent
About 40 per cent of all
jobs today are in agriculture,
and A&M’s Department of
Agriculture is able to' prepare
students to go out and make
the best of them.. ■
Agriculture, contrary to common
belief, is not just farming and
ranching, reported student mem
bers of the Agricultural Council
here. They say agriculture is a
science, a business, a profession
and an industry which needs 15,000
new college graduates each year
in the eight major fields of agri
culture.
These fields include agricultural
research, industry, business, educa
tion, communications, conservation
services and farming and ranch
ing.
Entered u second-clasa
Batter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas,
andar the Act of Con
gress of March 8, 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City, Chicago, Lo»
Angeles, and San Fran
cisco.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi
cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in
the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights
of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
News contributions may be made by telephone (VI 6-6618 or VI-
6-4910) or at the editorial office room, on the ground floor of the
YMCA. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (VI 6-6415) or al
the Student Publications Office, ground floor of the YMCA.
JOE TIN DEL Editor
Jim Neighbors Managing Editor
Jim Carrell - Sports Editor
Gayle McNutt . - City Editor
Val Polk, Fred Meurer, Joe Buser News Editors
Jim Bower, Dave McReynolds, Barry Hart, Leland Boyd Has-beens
Joy Roper Society Editor
Jerry Haynes, Ronald Easley
John West, G. R. McCain
Don Collins
George Wise
Maurice Olian
Reporters
Staff Photographers
Staff Cartoonist
Circulation Manager
CHS Sports Correspondent
Pointing out that a college grad
uate earns $72,00 more in his life
time than the average high school
graduate, the council said that be
cause of the huge number of work
ers needed in agriculture, the field
was one of the best in which to
seek ones’ fortune.
“We feel a student, upon com
pletion of a major field of study
in agriculture, is capable of under
standing and solving the ever ris
ing problems in an ever expanding
field of agriculture,” said the coun
cil.
lege by high school students is that
all their time is spent in classrooms
and theory. This is not true, es
pecially for students in the Animal
Husbandry Department at A&M.
AH students take an active part
in actual work in all of the rrfany
phases of breeding, feeding, man
agement and marketing through
facilities of the AH Department.
They become thoroughly acquain
ted with all classes and types of
livestock.
Some’ of these-phases of • study
in the depai'tment are slaughter
ing and cutting carcasses, repro
duction with complete training in
artificial, insemination, marketing
and handling facilities, livestock,
meat and wool judging and man
agement—production practices.
: Teaching is done by outstanding
leaders in agriculture using up-to-
date facilities. Classes and prac
tice work is done in the Animal In
dustries Building which is equipped
with a Meats Laboratory, and at
the different animal centers on the
college farm.
All of the work is not actual
schoolwork. There are many acti
vities in the A H Department such
as the Saddle and Sirloin Club. The
Saddle and Sirloin Club is the
organization on the college cam
pus. It sponsors many activities
including the All Aggie Rodeo, bar
becues, the Cattleman’s • Ball, the
Little Southwestern Livestock
Show and Ham Sale, . and meats
and wool judging’ teams. It also
'exhibits livestock at major shows
throughout the State.
Many of the Saddle and Sirloin
members are hired to'assist super
visors of the big livestock shows
each year. This and the Little
Southwestern Livestock Show give
AH students an opportunity to be
come qualified livestock show man
agers.
The various judging teams which
are made up of club members trav
el more than 15,000 miles each
year to compete in national con
tests with expenses paid by the
club. Places the teams enter in
clude Denver, Chicago, Kansas
City, Oklahoma City, Fort Worth
and on other college campuses.
Outstanding ranches across the
country are visited while students
are on these trips.
Students and professors of the
Animal Husbandry Department
wish to welcome you to the cam
pus and will be most happy to show
you the facilities and answer any
of your questions.
A&M’s Collegiate FFA Chapter
held its annual Prof-Student Ban
quet last night in the Maggie
Parker Dining Room.
After the baxbequed chicken ban
quet, outstanding members of the
chapter were given citations by
E. V. Walton, head of the Agri
cultural Education Department.
Those recognized were Roy King,
outstanding senior for the fall se
mester; Stanton Brown, outstand
ing senior for the spring semester;
Arlis Addix, outstanding freshman,
and Delmer Dietering, top member
of the junior chapter.
The chapter also presented a
$125 scholarship to George Svatek,
junior Ag. Ed. major from Eagle
Lake and two leather briefcases to
chapter sponsors O. M. Holt and
Dr. J. D. Gray.
Dr. T. E. McAfee of the Ag
ronomy Department was selected
as the outstanding professor in
the School of Agriculture.
Master of ceromonies for the
banquet was John Pogue and J. K.
Martin provided music afterwards.
For fancy cooks: small metal
devices—usually French—may be
used to make cutter “curls.”
Baptist Students
Plan Conference
The State Baptist Student Un
ion Planning Conference, which
will be held May 3-5 at the
Lathum Springs Baptist Encamp
ment, will officially open with a
supper program tomorrow.
There will be no registration fee
for the event which will have as
special guests Chester Swor, 11.
A. Springer, David Alexander,
William Crook, Winifred Smith and
Hooper Dilday.
Two Short Courses
Scheduled for May
Two short courses have been an
nounced for May, according to P.
W. Hensel, short course director.
From May 8-10 the Cottonseed
Oil Mill Operators will have their
short course, sponsored by the De
partment of Chemical Engineering.
The Nurseryman’s Short Course
will be held from May 27-29. It
is sponsored by the Department of
Floricultural and Landscape Arch
itecture.
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