The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 15, 1968, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    : >. s'
if
Dominicans Tour U.S. Dairy Plants
Two T«xu A&M dairy teWneo
atudonU from Um Dominkan JU-
Public wil ri.it fir. daily pUnta
in throo atotm duriny lata Auy-
ost and oarly SapUmbw.
Thay ara Joan Emaato Villar 3
and Ramon G. Bajaran, both jun-
ior» majoring hi dairy manufac
turing.
Pwpoaa of thair trip. U to
■tudy organisation and o pa ra
ti on. of major dairy manufac
turing plant* i
Thay will Uar tha Doan Milk
Company and tha Kyana Milk
Producer, in Louisrilla, Ky., Aug.
8S-2S and Aug. 29-M; tha Ar
mour Creamery in Spring-field,
Ky., Sapt. 2-4; the Borden Com
pany in Columbus, Ohio, Sapt
4-10; and tha Borden Company
in Woodstock, Ill, Sapt 11.
William E. Beach of tha AAM
Read Battalion Classifieds
Office of International Programs
said Villar and Bajaran are at
tending the unhrarsity on schol-
• rshipe sponsored by tha U. 8.
Agency for International Devel
opment (AID).
Dr. Henry Randolph of tha
AAM Animal Science Depart
ment Dairy Section said Villar
and Bajaran will prepare a class
report on the trip.
He said the pleats to be visited
“are some of the very beat op
erations in the United States.”
Tha Dean plant is fully auto
mated and processes a complete
Una of fluid milk and cultured
products.
Tha Kyana plant is a producer
cooperative operation processing
dry milk powder and butter, and
tha Armour plant is typical of
those that manufacture milk pro
ducts (cheese, powder, condensed
milk and butter.
Borden has two large plant, in
Columbus, Randolph added. One
is a diversified mUk and related
products plant, and the other is
fully automated for making ice
cream and other froeen desserts.
He said Borden’s plant In
Woodstock is the largest milk
processing operation in the world.
The students will observe many
of the latest developments in
equipment end processing tech
nology.
Randolph said the trip wiU be
a valuable supplement to the aca
demic training of Villar and Be-
jaran and should provide many
useful ideas when they join the
Dominican Republic Department
of Agriculture after graduation.
|iv ’# V.' ,1
THE BATTALION'
Thursday, August II, IMS College Station, Texas Page S
Graduation Plans Set For
Driver Training Program
E
Graduation ceremonies for %
high school teachers and assist
ants participating in a driver edu
cation program at Texas AAM
art set for 7:S0 p. m. Friday in
the Memorial Student Center.
Dr. Leslie Hawkins, Tea* AAM
industrial education professor and
director of the five wash program,
said the featured speaker will he
Harlan Ford of Austin, assistant
commissioner af education, Texas
Education Agency,
Hawklop noted participants in
the course include 42 certificated
supervising teachers sad 64 per- .
sons who enrolled to qualify as
teching assistants.
The teaching assistants began
tha course July 16 and were joined '
by the supervising teachers July ’
29.
■jcpWCK eoop-.W'PW'^W‘/MJ615i6-t7‘l0e6
[Of- fc/EMW LOW
WEEKEND 6PECIAIS!
JSkop
PIGGLY WIGGLY
■
HEART O’
TEXAS
GRADE ‘A*
WHOLE
LB.
. f
ioiNan ' ..MMh ,
INKERS EVERY DAI
Reiser a i.W^wr.*^.Swi*OOS.«w»WiSi.CriWi mil I
It's Free! No Purchase Needed 1
THIS WEEKS WINNERS
MRS. J. W. HELMS —175.00 — BRYAN
MARVIN L. ROBINSON — $100.00 — CS.
MRS. RICHARD SELSKY — $100.00 — BRYAN
.
JUDY ROBINSON — $25.00 — CA
MRS. DALE BREMMER — $3.00 — CS.
1 /
i
tfl*
► v -
wope
IIM
Of-PCXH
§1
vmm
lOiimmrowjav
1HC or-
wrwtts Au6^r ^ ^
m rmm —4 ant iamd m
■\
mm
OIU
1
\CUki
RJAWfiW, \¥m
^®)fcs»l9
Del Monte — 46-Oz. Can
i.mpefniit« Pineapple
no. ^«ua 11 300 Cam — Ranch Style
§MJCE IBEANS 5 For 88c
mm*
\i\
3 For $1.00
. »
3-Lb. Can — Mrs. Tuckers
ISHORTENING 59c
winwie
?f9C
Mexican,
PlNN#
man
i
U01
mit
nm
S59f
fftSU ■]
'to/
OtllCN^
4 10<
^UfOFNlA
1A6IWE
\m$>
/ cool
mm>
ml
f^ELL
HOUf\5
SAMintiMiy
^ S/tOp ^
PIGGLY WIGGLY
t >
enJWeiTEEQ 4
mtrvii
mm