The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 18, 1965, Image 3

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THE BATTALION
Thursday, February 18, .1965 College Station, Texas
Page 3
Students Offered
Free Publications
By Ag Informa tion
By RICHARD A. COOK
Special Writer
The old horse barn doesn’t hold
stock anymore, but it’s still a
place to get “good bull.”
Some Aggies are missing out
on an opportunity to get free
literature that may prove help
ful in their respective courses of
study, said Hal Taylor, editor and
head, Department of Agricultural
Information.
“About 200 students each month
take advantage of the availability
of Experiment Station and Exten
sion Service publications,” Tay
lor said. “Most of the students
are agricultural majors, but
some from every college and de
partment on campus are repre
sented in that 200.”
“What have they got that would
interest me” ? a student might
ask. Let’s take a look at a few
publications and whom they may
possibly concern.
For students interested in stu
dies on cattle there are bulletins
like B-908, Breeding Programs
for Commercial Beef Herds; B-
956, Your Cow and Calf Busi
ness; B-978, Using Data Proces
sing Equipment to Keep Beef
Cattle Production Records; B-976,
Planning For Profitable Dairy
ing; and TAP-109, The Texas
Dairy Industry and A&M.
Electrical engineers can find
leaflets like L-540, First Aid
for Electrical Injuries; L-535, Hot
Facts on a Cold Subject; and
L-554, Make a Continuity Tester.
Floriculture majors might like
to look over some like MP-574,
Texas Guide for Controlling Di
sease on Ornamental Plants; or
B-995, What You Should Know
About Plant Diseases. Then
there’s B-980, A Planning Guide
for Home Landscaping, that gives
pointers for arrangement of
shrubs and trees.
Student in forestry might read
L-568, Welcome to the National
Forests in Texas; or TAP-315,
Growing Christmas Trees in
Northeast Texas.
Journalism students interested
in different approaches to maga
zine layout profit sumply byj
examining some of the many dif
ferent combinations of design and
type in the publications.
The previously mentioned publi
cations are just a few randomly
picked examples of what the mail
ing room at Agricultural Infor
mation has available for interest
ed persons. To save time, students
requesting publications should ask
for them by number at the mail
ing room counter.
Claude McAdams, distribution
supervisor for the department,
suggested “students should ask
for a copy of MP-151, Publica
tions Available. It lists all our
publications so a person can see
what he might want. We also
exhibit small quantities of new
publications on a board near the
counter so visitors may help
themselves.”
Taylor says, “Our publications
are intended for the use of adults,
particularly those working with
the Agricultural Extension Serv
ice and the Agricultural Experi
ment Station. However, we wel
come students who have a real
concern about some subject and
we’ll do our best to supply their
needs, as long as our supplies
last.
“We have one restriction. It
applies to all users of publica
tions. No individual may have
more than one publication of
each kind and the total number
of copies cannot exceed 25.”
Religious Freedom
Is Sermon Subject
Reverend Philip Schug, minister
of the First Unitarian Church in
San Antonio since 1952, will be
a guest speaker at the Unitarian
Fellowship in College Station at
305 Old Highway 6, South, Sunday
night at 8 o’clock.
Active in the area of religious
freedom and separation of church
and state, Rev. Schug secured
financial back and helped give di
rection in the suit that Mrs. Vash-
ti McCollum carried to the United
States Supreme Court against sec
tarian religious education in the
public schools.
The McCollum case was deieded
in favor of the plaintiff in 1948
and has become one of the land
marks of Supreme Court decisions
in the separation of church and
state.
Rev. Schug has been an in
structor in speech at North Cen
tral College from 1939 to 1941, a
chaplain to the Elgin State (men
tal) Hospital in Illinois from 1942
to 1943, the minister to the Uni
tarian Church at Urbana, Illinois
Article Published
By History Prof
The latest issue of the “Journal
of Presbyterian History” carries
an article by Dr. Haskell M. Mon
roe, assistant professor of history.
The article entitled “South
Carolinians and the Formation of
the Presbyterian Church in the
Confederate States of America”
considers the rising dissension in
the Presbyterian Church brought
on by a conflict of views of the
Northerners and Southerners.
Monroe specializes in the his
tory of the South.
The professor writes the South
erners often criticized the “Old
School” domination of the national
church, and ‘looked forward to a
new organization in the South, of
a body free from the powerful ad
ministrative boards, which South
erners had criticized for so long.”
from 1953 to 1947, and Associate
Regional Director of the South
western Unitarian Conference from
1953 to 1959.
Curently, he is Executive Sec
retary and Regional Director of
the Southwestern Unitarian Con
ference, an office which he held
in 1955 and has held continuously
since 1959. Rev. Schug and his
wife Mary were married in 1939
and have two daughters: Mary
Margaret and Theeta Ann.
The topic of the address is “The
Power of Dreams.”
Ags Compete
In Aerospace
Paper Contest
Harry J. Sweet announced
Charles J. Knight and Bruce G.
Lane as winners of the Depart
ment of Aerospace Engineering
student paper contest.
Sweet, faculty advisor of the
A&M Chapter of the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astro
nautics, said the contest was held
Monday from 2-6 p.m. in Room 229
of the Chemistry Building. Out
of 40 papers submitted, eight were
chosen for oral presentation, and
the final two were chosen from
the talks.
Senior aerospace engineering
students and Danny R. Tidwell,
conductor of the contest, judged
the speeches. Each student was
limited to a 20-minute presenta
tion. Knight’s paper is entitled
“Considerations In The Optimum
Design of a Super-Orbital Re-En
try Configuration”. Lane’s win
ning presentation was entitled
“Low Distribution and Weight In
dicator.”
The two winners will go to Dal
las April 22-24 to present their
papers in the 13th annual Student
Paper Contest.
SPECIALS
Regular Mexican Dinner—Fried Beans
Rice, two Enchiladas, Taco and Choice
Soft Tortillas or Crisp Tortillas,
Crackers or Bread.
Thursday thru Sunday
Casa Chapultepec — Chapultepec
2 Locations To Serve You
WllGDIJ lv6D0C 1513 College Ave. — 413 Hiway 6, So.
r r TA 2-9649 — VI 6-9955
Reg. Price $1.00
Come Early
50c
GRUTBUYS
ON ALL VOUR FOOD NEEDS
SPECIALS GOOD THUR. - FRI. - SAT.
SHURFINE
TEA
SANITARY FESTIVAL
i/i-Lb.
Box
MELLORINE
i/ 2 Gal.
Square
PET EVAPORATED
MILK
RANCH STYLE
BEANS
7
7
Tall $1 OO
Cans
15-Oz. Sm
Cans
IMPERIAL
SUGAR
PURE CANE
LB.
BAG
LIMIT ONE WITH $2.50 PURCHASE OR MORE
ADDITIONAL SUGAR 5-Lbs. 49?
TOMATOES
15
Quantity
Right
Reserved
VINE
RIPE LB.
• • • • •
nflO to ti-tt i
ORANGES or
GRAPEFRUIT
1C O c
Bag
Your
Choice
Yellow
ONIONS 2; 15
Delicious
APPLES 3 a 39
VALUABLE COUPON
FREE 100
S&H Green Stamps
WITH THIS COUPON AND THE
PURCHASE OF $10.00 OR MORE
(LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER)
MUST BE ONE PURCHASE
COUPON EXPIRES FEBRUARY 20.
Cigarettes Excluded
GROUND BEEF
FRESH
GROUND
DAILY
• •••••
QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED
Lbs
1.00
Boneless — Heavy Beef
fSr
wfdUstin,
ORfiS
STEW MEAT - 59
Orr’s Pure Pork
WEI
GIVE
mtst
SAUSAGE
lb.
Tall Korn — Sliced
BACON
39
49
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
Downtown Ridgecrest
200 E 24 Street A 3516 Texas Are
OREEISI
STAMPS
All Meat
BOLOGNA s “ 39