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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1963)
ed .an Manned Sps uston. ts will be bJ istant dead McGuire i BATTALION Thursday, May 23, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 5 GINEERS HONORED rof, Students Presented ear’s Achievement Awards Ijrley A. Lynch, professor and I of the Department of Geology JGeophysics since 1946, is the waiting rea* ient of a 1963 $ 1;000 General -e exanmj« m i cs Fort Worth Award, lidates for* fective in J* lonor ’ ^ ase d on an outstand- ecord as a teacher, came to Ih during the annual A&M places lieering Faculty Achievement rchanical i# rds meeting . according» r of the cmhI' Ei Eeig ' h Secrest, chief sci- ;t for General Dynamics, made tr'cal engirffi P resen tation to the professor. •ested stdj™ h is taking early retire - as head of the department, his resignation is effective at snd of this semester. He plans ire to Hawaii, where he will inue his studies and do geolo- engineering consultanting office of 4 )f Enginwis sntually is ff 'rom 20 to i alf of the it ig at the fc nter and 4 ying at All semester tb le geologist received his BS ee in 1928; MS in geology, and an engineering mining essional degree in 1935, all the University of Missouri tting somehj pi of Mines. He taught at igton from 1929 until he came l&M, making a total of 34 s with the A&M System. idustry forte prog®' ij it rd Blank, nd geophysic, ember, associate pfr at A&ll f® lamilton, A ■ars, is a I® professor, a is an ento* |rd for in R. Norris of McGregor, )r food technology major, has named winner of the 1963 40-yearjnia Dare Extract Company best overall perform- in dairy products judging. The rd is an engraved plaque and lember of ^ l years, isl and head of Geology fd jwell, assist ih, joined fc |, e r. A. V. Moore, dairy science tssor, said Norris topped his anates in organoleptic evalua- (appearance, taste and smell) major dairy products. Reeves, a the facu^ y jrofessor, assignment in PEN )0MESTI C to ^ . office hdP' ’keepers, en- skilled a® ill types, on and pri vate ited State 5 , Belgi® Iran, »<‘ sst U* tation, » omen, both n these jot ation bla^' charge nation Cen- p, 0. as. Noo^ any knd' ,d. ^ e . are 0 f Brood® erce. IG xury i sq^ aKE I H0l r ^ | irmatio 11 icrties place exas 7-25^ .445 [Arlington, he was an associ- professor of mathematics, or- ized a department of geology, professor of mathematics and tgy, and was head of the geo department. During that time, ell, Taste Wins iris An Award he also was a geological, mining, petroleum and general engineering consultant for several oil firms in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Lynch was brought to A&M to reorganize geology on a post-war basis. He moved the department from the School of Arts and Sci ences to the School of Engineering, started geological engineering and geophysics, expanded the graduate program, and initiated sponsored research. He is listed in American Men of Science, International List of Sub marine Geologists and Oceano graphers, Who’s Who in Education, Who’s Who in the Southwest, and is the author of many articles and publications in his professional Field. Four senior engineering stu dents received Engineering Facul ty Achievement Awards at the meeting. The honors went to Jerry Morgan of Houston, majoring in mechanical engineering; James Carnes of San Benito, chemical engineering; Jimmie Guy of Col lege Station, electrical engineer ing; and Dan Scarborough of San Antonio, industrial engineering. Making the presentations were Fred Benson, dean of the School of Engineering; Dr. Clifford Sim- mang, head, Mechanical Engineer ing Department; Dr. J. D. Lindsay, head, Chemical Engineering De partment; A. R. Burgess, head, Industrial Engineering Depart ment; and H. C. Dillingham of the Electrical Engineering Depart ment. The awards are based on acade mic achievement and extra-curri cula activities. Students are chos en by a faculty committee headed by Dillingham. Veterinary Appreciation Week Draws Attention To School Gov. John Connally’s proclama tion of the week of May 26 as “Veterinary Appreciation Week in Texas” will focus special attention on A&M. The institution has the only school of veterinary medicine in the state and is one of 18 in the nation. DR. A. A. PRICE, dean of veter inary medicine, said the school was founded in 1916, and the first graduating class four years later had only four members, Today, the school graduates ap proximately 60 young men per year and has more than three times that number of qualified students making application for admittance each year. The governor’s proclamation will help celebrate the 100th anniver sary of the American Veterianary Medical Association and for the third time in the association’s his tory, a Texan, Dr. Dan Anderson of Fort Worth, is president. THE TEXAS Veterinary Medical Association will celebrate its 50th anniversary this year. Dr. Robert E. Jones of Childress is president, and Dr. Gerald Parker of San An tonio is president-elect. Dr. Price said that when AVMA was organized in 1863, the United States had only one private veteri nary college. The school was in Philadelphia and is now extinct. He said the modern veterinarian has had a minimum of two years of pre-veterinary college training and four years of intensive study in a veterinary school accredited by AVMA before he receives his DVM (doctor of veterinary medicine) de gree. There are now more than 1,200 veterinarians licensed to practice in Texas. They may be in research work, teaching, military service, government service, general prac tice, or belong to any one of 31 different categories of veterinary medical woi’k. UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP (Formerly Shaffer’s) Is Having A BOOK Every 25th Person Selling Books Get FREE A Gift Package Of Merchandise Valued Up To $5.00 You May Receive Such Gifts As: • Fountain Pens • Aggie Stationary • Aggie Key Chains • Decals • Aggie Belt Buckles Trade Your Books and Take Advantage © of Our RECORD SALE EVERY Album On Sale Reg. $4.98 Albums Now Only $3.48 Reg. $3.98 Albums Now Only $2.73 r: Ttt a, j}0eaAuM,~tb a&u)£ refers mmommnu wmsmm*±M m .jmpji Pi z5 ntisii wismi Lb. SWIFT PREMIUM BACON FRESH GROUND BEEF Lb. 49c * chuck steak c;:;r c :r: B “ f L „49c * lb. 49c N E GOOD VALUE Smooth Spreading — Lb. MIRACLE WHIP PORK and BEANS PRESERVES F I R ST PICK Peach or Apricot KRAFT . Qt. 49 VAN CAMPS - No. 300 Can 10' Fresh Firm Tasty Tomatoes 2 lbs- Mexican Sugar Loaf FOR Golden Ripe Bananas LBS. 3»» $1 00 TV. FROZEN POT PIES Beef - Chicken - Turkey £ p*s $100 Snow crop—Frozen ORANGE SAMOA 5 6 c^ $1.00 Patio Dinner ENCHILADA !^ h 39c Fresh APPLESAUCE NAPKINS^"" First Pick 2 ”*■ 35 White or Colors pu s . ot 29 c 200 T.V. HOMO MILK G / u U9c BLACKEYED PEAS 2 Lbs .25c U.S. No. 1 Russet Potatoes 10 B= b g 65c Juicy Sunkist Lemons ^ 19c LUSTRE CREAM m' DILL PICKLES Whole, Good Value ot. HAIR SPRAY ICE CREAM LARGE EGGS C 8 Campfire | Charcoal I Lilly or Sanitary c Ga " on / J Square Odom’s Grade A Dozen 29 £Q C I Briquets ~ 5-Lb. Bag 59 1 39c QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED f Hunt’s Whole Unpeeled APRICOTS cl 29c Kraft Jet Puffed MARSHMALLOWS ^ 29c VALUABLE COUPON FREE 100 S&H Green Stamps WITH THIS COUPON AND THE PURCHASE OF $10.00 OR MORE (LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER) COUPON EXPIRES MAY 25. & Alf an- omrs \v.vx pS: SPECIALS GOOD THUR. - FRI. - SAT. 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 200 E. 24 Street 0 3516 Texas Ave Downtown Ridgecrest I