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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1964)
;er ! Ilea: in Am spectropfe ians toii hat fon»t ks. to us m r is tom emphsj nt abom gOOd ill; ie saved i^zes a i nd quait s say. 'hat i s ft tical Ser neter n* such as: nganese ation, wii substaw 3S 15 to achine tal s are ra mical ana ake one n ks to da nents (pi vely," i pectropt ccurate, lasureni! i per kii n. A in nge is: to 200 pt us thei oe analr hout eke this uni lab «p se it to ages, fe soils." is how uced by deterniii rgh an is bun Then oed by THE BATTALION Thursday, November 5, 1964 College Station, Texas Page 5 Man’s Worth Examined By 6 Last Lecture’ Speaker “What are you worth in charac ter, ideals, service, attitude and in those qualities which abide for ever?”, Reagan V. Brown asked 30 students Monday night as he spoke at YMCA “Last Lecture” series. Brown, extension sociologist in the Department of Agricultural Economics and Sociology, exam ined different methods of deter mining a man’s worth—chemical analysis, dollar value, education, skill and genius. After explaining why these measurements can not give a true picture of a man’s worth, he said, “The value of a man to himself depends on his ability to give him self away. “If you have given yourself away in service; if your legacy to your family and friends has per manently ennobled their lives; if you have tried your best to repay your debt to your community; and if you possess clean hands and a pure heart, your value is above computation,” concluded Brown. ★★★ W. Howard Badgett of A&M will attend the annual meeting of the Central States Region of the National Association of Phy sical Plant Administrators for Colleges and Universities Sun day through Wednesday. The meeting will be at University of Kansas. Badgett, head of the University Office of Physical Plant, is a past president of the regional group. ★★★ Virgil Reynolds, merchandising director for Weingarten’s Inc. in Houston will participate in A&M’s 13th annual Farm and Ranch Credit School for Commercial Bankers Nov. 11-13. The food store official will dis cuss on a panel “The Future for Beef.” Other panel members are Dolph Briscoe, Uvalde rancher and busi nessman; Dr. O. D. Butler, head of Department of Animal Science; y a FJ and J. D. Sartwelle, rancher and president and general manager of the Port City Stockyards in Hous ton. Ken Wolf, agribusiness econo mist in the Department of Agri cultural Economics and Sociology, said the conference is designed to help commercial bankers meet the ever-increasing capital require ments of the agricultural industry. ★★★ Professor Chris H. Groneman, head of the Department of In dustrial Education of A&M, will be the featured speaker Thurs day for the Industrial Education Section at the Kansas State Teachers Association convention in Topeka. His topic will be “Industrial Arts—Where Next?”. ★ ★★ Dr. Ralph L. Shriner, distin guished organic chemist, will speak here at 8 p.m. Thursday to the A&M-Baylor Section of the Amer ican Chemical Society, John B. Beckham, Section Secretary, an nounced. a recoFi Mmlcoflrl Supply ‘pedu/te, •92S S*Col!«g« Av«'>&ry«n,T«fes A fresh look in maternity wear for fall—A rayon acetate plaid jumper dress, tall and willowy. Worn with frothy white blouse or Casual Knits. Colors; Black/white only. Sizes 6-16. 9.98 Joyce's 608 So. College TA 2-2864 Shriner’s lecture on “The Antho- cyanins,” dyes occurring in certain vegetation, is open to the public and will be in Room 231, Chemistry Building. The organic chemist is an ad visory professor of chemistry at Southern Methodist University since his retirement as head of the Department of Chemistry of the University of Iowa. Earlier he taught at the University of Illi nois and headed the Department of Chemistry of the University of In diana. Dr. Raymond Reiser of the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition will go to Israel in December to develop a research project for the Office of Inter national Research of the Na tional Institutes of Health. The project will be a coopera tive effort between the Israeli Agricultural Experiment Station and the Hadassah Medical School of the Hebrew University, but will be under the supervision of Reiser. MEDAL, RETIREMENT ON SAME DAY . . Lt. Col. Homer Stuverud receives medal. AROTC Retiring Four years of “meritorious service” with the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps Detach ment at A&M won an Army Com mendation Medal for Lt. Col. Homer A. Stuverud. Presentation of the medal by Col. D. L. Baker, professor of military science, highlighted Stu- verud’s final day of active duty. The veteran of more than 22 years of service retired effective Sunday. The citation accompanying the medal reads in part: “(He has) demonstrated excep tional qualities of leadership, per sonal initiative and professional skill and . . . discharged his re sponsibilities in a consistently out standing manner.” Honors Colonel Stuverud served as officer in charge of the advanced section of the Department of Military Science. The Transportation Corps officer entered the Army in 1942 as a draftee. He was commissioned upon completing Officer Candidate School in April, 1943, and became a Regular Army officer after World War II service in Europe. He was in the Far East during the Korean conflict and holds varied sex-vice ribbons for World War II and Far East service. Stuverud, a native of Minnesota, has a bachelor’s degree from State Teachers College in Mayville, N. D. and the MA degree received in 1954 from the University of North Carolina. 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