The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 13, 1968, Image 4

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    Welch Quits Good Business
To Take Up Vet Profession
Don’t call Guy Welch a quitter.
Welch, 26-year-old son of Hous
ton Mayor and Mrs. Louie Welch,
quit a profitable profession in real
estate 17 months a g-o to pursue our
ambition of becoming' a veterin
arian. His drean was realized, this
week at Texas A&M when he was
officially admitted to the College
of Veterinai Medicine.
“It was one of the happiest days
of my H.ff when I opened that let
ter from Dean (Alvin A.) Price,”
Welch grinned. “I know I’ve got
three years of hard work staring
me in the face, but I’m ready to
get after it.”
Why would a man give up his
own real estate business to go
into a profession which is not like
ly to be as remunerative finan
cially?
“I hated what I was doing,”
Welch fired back. “No doubt about
it. I just wasn’t suited for what
I was doing. So I talked with my
wife, Robbie (the former Robbie
Boggess of Frnioa), and she a-
greed that we needed to do some
thing else.”
Mrs. Welch is a fifth grade
teacher at A&M Consolidated.
The Welch’s have two children,
Lisa, 4, and Mitchell, 2.
“I’d been thinking about trying
to be a vet for almost two years,”
the Dallas native recalled. “And
I’d been fooling around with
horses in Houston for a long
time. Finally, I realized that as a
vet I could make a good living
and do something I’d like to do
at the same time.”
Welch wound up work for a
bachelor’s degree in business ad
ministration last June at A&M,
but chose to pick up his sheep
skin at Abilene Christian College,
wher he played two years at half
back and fullback for the
Wildcats.
Tactfully, he asked that he
not be built up as a gridiron
hero.
“I’ve never felt scientifically
inclined, but I’ve always loved
animals,” Welch said. “Too, I
dreaded the prospects of taking
chemistry and physics. Let’s face
it, I was lazy. But, eventually, I
faced the fact that I’d have to
hit those books and keep hitting
'em if I expected to get into vet
school.”
Apparently, the stockily - built
Houstonian has come out ahead
in his warfare with chemistry
and physics. Registrar’s records
reflect a 2.7 grade point ratio for
his work at Aggieland. A 3.0 is
a straight “A.”
'Veterinary medicine is an ex
citing and changing profession,”
Cub Den Mothers
Ask For Workers
Bryan - College Station Cub
Scout den mothers will tell it like
it is on KBTX-TV’s “Town Talk”
at 3:30 p.m. Friday.
K. A. Manning, chairman of
the executive committee for Cub
Scout Pack 802 in College Sta
tion, said four current den moth
ers will appear on the television
program hosted by Mrs. Fern
Hamman as part of a recruiting
drive for next fall.
Participating in the program
will be Mrs. Edna Pruitt and Mrs.
Connie Haas, representing the
College Station Cubs, and Mrs.
Mildred Hendrix and Mrs. Nancy
Mireles, representing Bryan.
Manning said each of the women
has several years of experience
as a den mother.
“We hope to get across to pro
spective den mothers that while
such an undertaking does require
some work, it also is fun and is
a rewarding experience,” he noted.
Den mothers, Manning empha
sized, receive considerable help in
planning and conducting their
meetings. He said monthly theme
programs are provided to each of
the mothers by Cub Scout head
quarters
Every attempt is made to pro
vide an assistant den mother to
help with the meetings, Manning
added.
Den mothers are essential if we
are to have a Cub Scout program,”
he stressed.
Manning urged all mothers of
Cub Scouts to see the Friday pro
gram and contact him if they
would be willing to serve as a
den mother or an assistant next
fall.
Welch commented. “In the future,
a person will have to have an
acute awareness in technical ad
vances in prevention and cure
of animal diseases for the good
of the animal world and the hu
man population alike.”
“One big thing has impressed
me about A&M,” Welch disclosed.
“That’s the open-door policy by
most of the professors. If a stu
dent wants help and asks for it,
he usually gets it. I detest stu
dents who sit in class, don’t
take notes, don’t contribute any
thing to the class, fidget around
like a man holding a hot coal
waiting for the bell to ring, then
go around bad-mouthing the prof
for doing a lousy teaching job.”
Welch maintains a friendly rap
port with his “T e a s i p” twin
brother, Gary, who graduates
June 3 from the University of
Texas Dental School in Houston.
“We kid each other a lot, but
get along fine,” Welch admitted.
A hater of Aggie jokes, Welch
has become an ardent fan of A&M
athletics, especially since he
“chews the fat” regularly after
church with A&M Athletic Direct
or Gene Stallings.
“When people start to tell me
an Aggie joke,’ Welch said “I
just ask them if they have read
the new book: ‘How to Win the
Cotton Bowl,’ written this year
by 35 A&M football players.”
Welch’s interest in being a
veterinarian doesn’t end in the
classroom. He lives and breathes
it. After hunting unsuccessfully
for a ranch job this summer, he
accepted employment with a meat
packing company in Friona to
gain working experience with
large animals.
When Welch completes vet
school, he plans to establish a
clinic of his own in the Southwest.
Cochran To Take
National Office
Dr. Robert G. Cochran, Nuclear
Engineering Department head at
Texas A&M, is president-elect of
the 6,000-member American Nu
clear Society’s Educational Divi
sion.
BRUSHING UP
Guy Welch gives “Annie” a happy brush off after being
accepted in Texas A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine.
Welch will begin a three-year study program this fall with
the aim of becoming a veterinarian in the Southwest.
Cochran will take office Satur
day during the ANS meeting in
Toronto, Ontaria, Canada.
“The education division has
strong industrial leadership since
every person working in industry
has an important stake in the
future of education,” Cochran
said. “This is especially true be
cause the strength of the uni
versities provide assurance of the
quality of their associates and
employees.”
Oak Ridge Associated Univer&i-
ties.
Head of A&M’s Nuclear Engi-
neering Department since 1959,
Cochran has been a technical con
sultant for “start ups” of more
than a dozen research reactor fa
cilities in the United States.
Minor Injuries
Result Of Fire
Enrollment Hits 166 At Junction
Cochran pointed out participa
tion in the Educational Division
with its activities in curricula and
industrial-university relations is
one mode of helping that future.
Sea creatures are extremely
adept at extracting chemicals
from the ocean. The element
vanadium was not known to exist
in sea water until it was discover
ed in the blood of tunicates and
sea cucumbers. Iodine is rather
scarce in ocean water, but sea
weeds contain vast amounts of
it.
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HRESTONE STORES
TEXAS AVE. & POSTOFFICE ST. — BRYAN, TEXAS
Texas A&M’s summer adjunct
at Junction registered 166 stu
dents, according to Dr. W. J.
Dobson, director.
Courses in biology, geology,
civil engineering, English, history
and physical education are offered
during the first of two six-week
summer terms.
A 14-man staff Dobson heads
includes Dr. Robert D. Turpin of
A&M’s Civil Engineering Depart
ment; Dr. Karl Koenig, geology;
Louis F. Hauer and H. S. Cress-
well, English; Dr. Victor H. Treat
and Larry D. Hill, history; Paul
M. Andrews, Dr. Donald J. Merki
and Dr. John M. Chevrette, health
and physical education.
Students get classwork, study
and recreation through an organ
ized inter-cabin intramural pro
gram along with swimming, ca
noeing and fishing.
Among Cochran’s tasks are
scheduling and arranging presen
tation of professional papers in
the nuclear field, assisting in the
formulation of professional rela
tionships among members, and
promotion of cooperation with
other scientific and professional
groups having similar objectives.
A flash fire Wednesday in
Texas A&M biochemistry labora
tory caused minor injuries to a
graduate student from India.
Jagat Singh, from Mansurpur,
India, reportedly received singed
hair on the arms as the result of
a 10:15 a.m. blaze in the Herman
Keep Building.
The fire, of undetermined
origin, was quickly extinguished,
The attending physician at the
university hospital was not im
mediately available for comment.
Cochran, Indiana and Pennsyl
vania State graduate, is a mem
ber of the nuclear science and
engineering fellowship board of
Dr. J. W. Dieckert, associate
professor of biochemistry and bio
physics, said the blaze started
when a portion of petroleum ether
ignited.
Extent of property damage was
not known. Dieckert said the fire
caused “some” damage to labora
tory woodwork.
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687tfn
Capable Aggie needed for summer job.
2814 Cavitt. Call 822-8635 or 822-4648.
686t3
Babysitter wanted for church group. 846-
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Wanted, two registered nurses for su
pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County
Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent
Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent
Salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria
Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 465tfn
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CHILD CARE
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Day Nursery, 604 Boyett, 846-
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HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
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Good used tin. Gentle colt green broke &
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’63 Ford Falcon Station Wagon, $430.
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Good Saddle Horse Call 822-3980
1965 VW, very good condition, radio and
sell for best price. 846-4108.
heater, will se
1966 Galaxie 600 XL, Etnberglo-Parch-
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TYPEWRITERS
Electric, Manual, &
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OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328
Bryan, Texas
Classic Wax
Cal Custom
Accessories
Hurst Floor Shifts
Enco, Conoco, Amalie
& Havoline 35c qt.
We stock all local major brands.
Where low oil prices originate.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings
50% Off
Parts Wholesale Too
Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel
10,000 Parts-We Fit
96% of All Cars - Save
25 - 40%
Brake Shoes $3.19 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
Auto trans. oil 25*
AC - Champion - Autolite plugs
Starters - Generators
All 6 Volt - $10.95 Each
Most 12 Volt — $11.95 Each
Tires—Low price every day —
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Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
21 years in Bryan
FOR RENT
Furnished two bedroom brick apartment,
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Two
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COLLEGE HILLS: Across from A&M
golf course, 1 bedroom, nicely furnished
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1964 Super Sport Impala Convertible,
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ten.
new Elementary school. Large lot. May
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NOW OPEN
U-HIT-EM
GOLF DRIVING RANGE
On Hwy. 60 between A&M & Airport
Weekdays — 4 p. m. - 10 p. m.
Weekends — 1 p. m. - 10 p. m.
SOSOLIKS
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713 S. M IN 822-1941
THE BRYAN ARMS
APARTMENTS
“Congenial Living”
Separate Adult & Family Areas
“Children Welcome’’
Model Apts. Open For Inspection
From $120 - All Utilities Paid
1602 S. College Avenue
Resident Manager - Apt. 65
Phone 823-4250
Make Your Deposit Now
SPECIAL NOTICE
BUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
Stated communications, Thun,
day June 13, at 7 :00 p. m. elec*
tion of officers and fifty year
Masonic Service Award to Rev.
Robert L. Brown. Members are
urged to attend.
Tom Chandler, W.M.
Joe Woolket, Sec. 58811
ATTENTION ! Personnel
A&M University. See
your furniture and
about the student pis
distinctive furniture—Wood Furniture Com.
601 North Texas. Telephone 822-
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Midway between Bryan &
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STUDENTS 1 1
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Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
of Student Publications before deadline of
1 p.m. of the day preceeding p
eadline i
ublicatio
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Boudreau. Robert Donald
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Meteorol
ogy
Dissertation: A Solution to the Integral
Equations for Radiative Transfer of
Heat in the Atmosphere
Time: June 14, 1968 at 10:00
Time: June 14. 1968 at 10:00 a.
Place: Room 809. Goodwin Hall
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Faubion, Billy Don
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Physical
Chemistr
ry
Dissertation: ESR Study
Radical of Anthraquinoi
the Anion
■ne
puter Analysis of ESR Spectra
of the i
and the Com-
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Jewelry Repair
Diamond Senior
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Jewelers
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GM Lowest Priced Cars
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With Normal Down Payment
OPEL KADETT
Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick
2700 Texas Ave.
822-1336
26th & Parker
822-1307
Time: June 11, 1968 at 2:00
Place: Room 220, Chemistry
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies
p. m.
Bldg.
Students wishing to place a 1967 AGGIE
LAND in their high school may pick them
up in the office of Student Publication!,
Services Building. 548tfn
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Ford Dealer
THE NORTH TEXAS FARRIERS SCHOOL can be of tremendous
value to Veterinary students or to any horseman who wishes to
follow the Farrier trade either full time or part time. Competent
farriers make from $15,000 to $25,000 per year. You DO HAVE
TIME to attend this unique school and prepare yourself for an
interesting and rewarding occupation because ours is the only
school in the world that can produce a competent farrier in just
two weeks of intense work for about half,the cost at most Farrier
Schools. By offering experienced instruction and the most ad
vanced teaching techniques, we have produced successful farriers
from 41 states and three foreign countries. This special summer
course, mainly for A&M stndents will be offered from August
12-25. Those interested write direct or contact Veterinary student
Dwight L. Gailey, 106 Kyle Street College Station.
NORTH TEXAS FARRIERS SCHOOL
Box 666, Mineral Wells, Texas
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
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SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT — OF
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402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas
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for information call:
846-3988
Trinity Place — Lawyer Street
College Station
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