The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 21, 1962, Image 3

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    rr^aml) Judging Conference
^‘Coining Up On June 27-29
Jnt stort; ^
7 call ( i A&M’s Lamb Judging 1 Confer-
becausjice will be held here June 27-29.
nany f|, Purpose of the session, which is
look doiJOifcored by the Animal Husban-
■y IDepartment at the college, is
ip of hs: co-ordinate ideas on what con-
arotniiiftmes a good show animal.
-y gotir. W. M. Oliver of the Animal Hus-
and slt indl 'y Department said outstand-
(i, and , g [jpheep men will be on the pro-
I saw;-a*.
t was Activities start the first day at
3 import a - m - registration in the
tes. I nimal Husbandry Pavilion. De-
hngs t onstration lambs will be on ex-
.ibit.
F Conference members will then
■e %
s Giiix Students Cited
MW, or Engineer Work
iLLE, ft 0
whistle Six A&M engineering- students
vn of Save been cited for their contri-
who actions to the Texas A&M Engi-
ser magazine.
nplemer; The Student Engineer’s Council
lepartt-aslnamed first, second and third
len - lace certificates for best techni-
ur of (%! land non-technical articles in
time i.^e I magazine published by engi-
Irs. fr eering students.
rue lea4 -f or best technical arti-
en ^ !l les were:
8 / ear HOUSTON — -Robert K. Wright,
ie too ® j,. , ,
r., first place, senior m aeronau-
" n ‘!cal engineering;
ties, air
he fire . SAN ANTONIO — John V. Ki-
, iwski, second place, graduate stu-
ea 5 ■ ent in aei’onautical engineering,
Mil Mulberry;
o,™* deni SON - Donald G. Ash-
urn, third place, senior in science,
.231 Bond.
1 fire tin
I j.^ Non-technical articles judged
j ^ llt est were written by:
’ ( he a use HOUSTON — John William
en j. ocke, first place, junior in archi-
jcture and law, 2427 Addison;
McGEHEE, Ark. — Elmer E.
oins, second place, senior in aero-
autical engineering, 911 Thomp-
on;
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Jay C.
'yle, third place, senior in chemi-
al engineering, 5224 Lee.
move to the Biological Sciences
Lecture Room to hear Dr. O. D.
Butler, head of the Animal Husban
dry Department, discuss purposes
of the meeting; a talk on carcass
cutout value by C. E. Hellbusch of
Denver, Colo., livestock consultant
for Safeway Stores, Inc.; and L. D.
Wythe Jr., A&M Animal Husban
dry Department, will discuss score
card evaluation.
The group will move back to the
pavilion to participate in a main
attraction of the conference: Eval
uation of four classes of lambs.
Later, the lambs will be slaughter
ed and their carcass cutout value
determined.
The four classes of live Iambs
will be officially evaluated by
Wythe; J. A. Gray, Roy Snyder
and Oliver, A&M animal husband
men; and Herman Carter of the
Mid-West Feed Yards at San An
gelo.
Other talks the first day are
“My Lamb Protection Goals,” by
//. S. Students
To Visit A&M
Some 135 high school students
and 4-H Club members will visit
Texas A&M College later this
month.
Eighty members of the Bastrop
County 4-H will arrive on the
campus at 9 a.m. Thursday for a
tour of campus facilities, according
to P. L. Downs Jr., official greeter
of the College.
The 4-H members, ranging from
ages 10 to 18, will be accompanied
by adult leaders from Bastrop.
The group will leave the A&M
campus about 4 p.m.
Thirty-five Corsicana State
Home students will be on the
campus June 26 to see Hood’s
Brigade-Bryan Centennial celebra
tion entitled" “Gallant Men of
Texas.” The historical pageant
will be held June 25-29 at Kyle
Field.
In addition, the Corsicana stu
dents will also tour campus facili
ties before returning to Corsicana,
Downs said.
Carl Martin, Menard rancher; “The
Kind of Feeder Lamb I Want To
Buy,” Carter; “Lamb Consumer
Demands,” S. Kent Christensen,
National Association of Food
Chains, Washington, D. C.; and
“Relationship of the Livestock
Show to Lamb Production,” R. B.
Tate. livestock superintendent,
San Antonio Livestock Exposition.
That evening, a lamb judging
contest will be held.
Activities on June 28 are a dis
play of ribbed carcasses of de
monstration lambs by Frank Orts,
A&M Animal Husbandry Depart
ment; demonstration of home
slaughter, by Snyder; classifying
show lamb, Gray; lamb carcass
contest opportunities, Oliver; and
factors affecting cutout values, by
C. E. Murphey, USDA Livestock
Division; cuttipg, cooking and serv
ing lamb, by Snyder, Mrs. Lillian
Kwasnieski of the American Lamb
Council, and Marie Tribble, foods
and nutrition specialist with the
Extension Service at A&M.
A lamb dinner is set for that
evening. Penrose Metcalfe of San
Angelo, president of £he National
Wool Growers Association, will
talk on “Modernizing Lamb Pro
duction and Marketing.”
Subjects and speakers June 29
are “Lamb Promotion by the Texas
Sheep and Goat Raisers Associa
tion,” by E. G. Cauble of Big Lake,
association president; “National
Livestock and Meat Board Educa
tion Program for Lamb,” Carl Neu
mann of Chicago, general manager,
National Livestock and Meat
Board; “Lamb and the American
Meat Institute,” Paul Zillman of
Chicago, livestock department di
rector, American Meat Institute;
“Increasing Demand for Lamb,”
L. Blaine Liljenquist, president,
.Western States Meat Packers As
sociation.
The final activity just before
noon will be a discussion of cut
out values of the demonstration
lambs by G. T. King and Z. I.
Carpenter, A&M Animal Husban
dry Department, and Karl Locke,
meat operations manager of Safe
way Stores at Dallas.
\BATTALION CLASSIFIED
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PHONE VI 6-6411
FOR RENT
COLLEGE HILLS, across from A&M
olf ^Course, air conditioned one bedroom
>artment, nicely furnished, ample closet
iace, garage, adults only. Ideal for couple
■ bachelors, S50.00 without Utilities. Phone
I 6-5031 after 6 p. m., all day weekends.
125tfn
Adults only. Two furnished garage apart-
ents, upstairs and downstairs. 210 Trant.
0.00, all utilities paid. TA 2-4363. 125t2
Furnished apartment, private. Phone
I 6-5559. 124t3
Unfurnished roomy two bedroom apart-
ent, 220 volt wiring, panel ray heat, near
•ockett School. Phone VI 6-6660. 122tfn
Rooms for men, two blocks from campus,
iHross, VI 6-8567. 122t4
Room, private entrance, private bath,
reel: blocks from campus, furnished in-
Jding small desk. $25/mo. Call VI 6-
14. 121t5
Large furnished one bedroom student
artment. North Gate. $50.00 including
ilities. Also, one at $25.00. VI 6-8214.
120tfn
One bedroom furnished house, available
ne 3, $40.00. VI 6-5036 or VI 6-5634.
116tfn
=====
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
•09 S. Main TA 2-6000
i -
YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR
& EICO KITS
© Garrard Changers
3 HI-FI Components
® Tape Recorders
JS Use Our Time Payment Plan
5RYAN RADIO & TV
TA 2-4862 1301 S. College Ave.
CHILD CARE
FOR SALS
Registered Doberman puppies, six weeks
old. TA 2-4501. 121tfn
FIRST GRADE—If your child will be six
after September 1, register him now for
private 1st grade. Limited enrollment.
Preparation for A&M Consolidated and
Bryan Schools: Also kindergarten and
year round nursery. Collier’s Mother Goose
School, 501 Restwood, TA 2-8760. 125t7
HELP WANTED
Lady experienced in or interested in
learning' floral design. Write Box 3284,
Bryan. Local opportunity. 124t2
Experienced care for children. Aged
k-6, large fenced yard, near campus and
indergarten. VI 6-4020. 125tfn
, must
dangle
123tfn
be 18 years
Restaurant,
Will babysit 8-5 or anytime. Phone VI 6-
6536. 125tfn
Will keep children in my home, B-3-D
College View. VI 6-5189. 124t2
FEMALE HELP WANTED
icational nurse interested in
ren in her home. Please in-
-X CV or call VI 6-8570 be-
i. 124t2
Licensed
keeping ch
Waitress wanted. E:
sary, must be over 18
working conditions. I
3606 South College.
ingle Restaurant,
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY
SPECIAL NOTICE
Childri
rates.
Electrolux sales and service.
Williams, TA 3-5331.
Nurse. TA 2-4803.
124tfn
90tfn
Will keep children, all ages, will pick
and deliver. VI 6-8151. Ill
Fish and picnic at Hilltc
dies on Hwy 6 south of Ci
Lake, 9%
ge. Tables
69tfn
WORK WANTED
Dependable maid, general housework,
babysit Monday thru Friday. Like morn
ing work, will consider full time. Call after
6 p.m., TA 3-3932. (Sarah) 124t2
Typing - electric typewriter. Experience:
Secretary, business teacher. VI 6-8510.
85tfn
SPECIALIZING! \
> In EYB EXAMINATIONS
and CONTACT LENSES^
BRYAN OPTICAL CLINIC
1 05 N b .' MAI N « B R YAN , ’T E X A S
DR. G. A, SMITH
' ' ' O PT O M E T R I S T
NOTICE
ELECTROLUX SALES
SERVICE & SUPPLIES
By Authorized Dealer
1003 S. College Ave, Bryan, Tex.
T. Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
SOSOLIKS
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
O BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN. TEXAS
AGGIES NOTICE
SAE 30 Motor Oils 15£ Qt.
Major Brand Oils .... 27-310 Qt.
For your parts and accessories
AT a DISCOUNT See us—
Plenty free parking opposite
the courthouse.
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
Brake shoes, Fuel pumps, Water
pumps. Generators, Starters,
Solenoids, etc. Save 30 to 50%
on just about any part for your
car.
Filters 40% discount
AT JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington
SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP
For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donut*
ANYWHERE
Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
THE BATTALION
TlinrsdaV, June 21,1962 ‘ ” College Station, Tex-as Page 3
Popular Sport At Aggieland
Hubert Wilson, junior from Beaumont, tice green at the A&M Golf Course on the
sharpens up his putting game on the prac- campus. (Photo by Ronnie Fann)
Hoy Snyder
Cited For
Top Service
Roy W. Snyder of A&M has
been cited by the National Live
Stock and Meat Board for out
standing seiwice.
Snyder and two other educators
—L. J. Bratzler of Michigan State
University and Robert Bray of the
University of Wisconsin — were
honored at the 15th annual Re
ciprocal Meat Conference at Ohio
State University recently.
Snyder, extension meat special
ist at A&M, has been working with
farmery and ranchmen of Texas
and Iowa for more than 30 years.
He arranged for the first car
cass contest for lambs at Kerr-
ville in 1960, being known as one
of the top judges of slaughter
lambs in the state.
As a consultant on foreign pro
grams of the United States, he
has traveled to several Central
and South American countries,
each time making a significant
contribution to the country visited.
Robert College, an American
school in Turkey, was founded by
a New York businessman a hun
dred years ago. Ninety per cent
of its students are Turkish.
B rands - are-
a-Bargain at
w
A
£
THESE PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY. JUNE 23. IN BRYAN ONLY. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
Coca Cola
: :
I
Light Crust
Fruit Pies
Bth Ctn.
Plus Dep.
All Purpose
Vegetable Oil
Flour
Dartmouth Frozen
Apple, Peach or Cherry 20-Oz.
Family Delight
Cream
55c
39 c
31 $1
Quart C
Quart
Bottle
Box
WEINGARTEN’S TENDER AGED U. S. CHOICE BEEF
v u : [Qu-.zul:
Square Cut
Shoulder
Lb.
39
Round Bone
Beef Roast . . . Lb. 49c
Square Cut
Beef Steak . . . Lb. 55c
Rath—Black Hawk
Pork Chops . . . Lb. 79c
Rayner’s—Polish Style
Smoked Sausage Lb. 59c
Fresh Lettuce c “ 10«
Fresh Peaches —» 14-
Swift Bologna 29 c
BARBECUE SAUCE ^ P , s ,J9c 1 CUT CORN T ; p i: ost . 2^.39c
INSTANT MILK S ! 4 ^79c f CHILI Gebha “ ut !^39c
| PIZZA PIES 7rZ ,n As, ; ,2 st49c j BASH DETERGENT ,o.i:r^.$2X9