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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1971)
'■ : ' ' " ' " ii'::.', .■ ■ : ' ' •/ • WON [HE BATTALION id it retching i, without »given su- kith visual «s pointed Itichard- l»al method maneuver i develop a nstruments mince and irtness for itil to the MH. irch nursery, ring Sunder M321 Fiut ryun. Sl.St 12>Wii )REN CEN. te Licensed, . N, J9t(n (CE n the Orfiti deadline o( publicatioo. LEdE toral Degree try LC1UM El- N SANUV EHSTRATI- niimy BMl ’liege -EGE oral Degree 1 icrobinkan IT10N or ORIGIN: m. Veterin»( ’liege EGE oral Degree luoation ON OF 1 KELATEI t POTEN- 1 AUSTIN Wednesday, June 23, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 5 Campus briefs Students will rebuild five fire truck pumpers Fire truck pumpers from Kil gore, Huntsville and Snook will be rebuilt to meet the state ac ceptance test during the 42nd annual Texas Firemen's Training School July 18-23. Henry D. Smith, chief instruc tor at the Engineering Extension Service here, said the three pump ers will be rebuilt by an 80-man pump maintenance class. The course is one of 14 offered during the one-week municipal school. Instructors are fire de partment master mechanics and techincal representatives from manufacturing firms. “All repair parts and materials e purchased by the cities,” Smith explained, “with labor fur nished by the class.” He said the firemen also will work with about $10,00 worth of new pumps donated by manufac turers as a teaching aid. Purpose of the class is to give community firemen the training to do maintenance work them selves, saving the local depart ment labor costs, Smith explained. “Texas cities spend millions of dollars each year for new equip ment and repair of old equip ment. We’ll show the men how to do their own maintenance and more importantly, proper preventive maintenance,” Smith added. Worth-based firm. Hill will assist in the recruiting and training of new field repre sentatives with the major portion of his efforts directed toward field training and supervision through out the state of Texas. Hill, a graduate of Sulphur Springs High School, is a former president of the State of Texas Future Farmers of America. He represented National Farm Life as a campus representative at A&M for a year and a half prior to joining the home office staff in his new position. Hill re ceived his bachelor’s degree in agriculture education. and may be used by the recipient at any college or university with the four-year Air Force ROTC program. Comstock said two of the A&M- bound students have already at tended summer new student con ferences. Awards total about $1,000 each per year for in-state students. It pays tuition, lab and associated fees, textbooks allowance and a monthly subsistence stipend. Four year recipients will enter flying category as pilots or navi gators upon graduation and com missioning. associate dean of the College of Education. “One of the most effective ways to develop public awareness of the coastal zone’s potential is through public schools and teach ers,” Dr. Jones said. “This course is designed to help teachers de velop and incorporate marine sci ence material into their regular science and social studies curri cula.” background to our program for the Edwards Plateau.” Dr. H. O. Kunkel, dean of the College of Agriculture and acting director of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, said Menzies is “one of the nation’s outstand ing leaders in the animal science field.” 16 freshmen will have AF scholarships Texas A&M will enroll 16 Air Force ROTC cadets this fall who will be on four-year Air Force financial assistance grants. Lt. Col. Thomas Comstock, act ing professor of rerospace studies, noted that scholarships are awarded at the high school level Teacher’s meeting planned in Corpus Forty Texas Gulf Coast elemen tary and junior high teachers will return to school this summer to increase their knowledge and un derstanding of the coastal zone. A pilot Coastal Zone Problems Institute will be held June 21- July 30 in Corpus Christi under the direction of Dr. Earl Jones, Director named for San Angelo Dr. Carl S. Menzies, head of the Animal Science Department at South Dakota State University, has been named resident director for research at the new Agricul tural Research and Extension Center at San Angelo. The ap pointment is effective Sept. 1. A&M President Dr. Jack K. Williams described Menzies as a “nationally recognized leader in the livestock industry; one who will bring a wealth of practical experience and sound academic 1970 graduate promoted Marcus Hill, 1970 Texas A&M graduate, has been named assist ant manager of sales and public relations for National Farm Life Insurance Company, according to Wm. C. “Brigham” Young, found er and chief executive of the Fort Food supply authority will give July lecture Vet graduate gets Galveston job Texas A&M’s first aquatic ani mal medicine graduate has join ed the staff at SeaArama Marine- world in Galveston. Dr. Kenneth N. Gray, 1969 doc tor of veterinary medicine grad uate from A&M, received the M.S. in veterinary microbiology in May. Texas A&M has the only vet erinary college in the United States offering formal training at the graduate level in aquatic animal medicine. The program is a part of the Sea Grant Program at Texas A&M. Sea Grant is patterned aft er the Morrill Act, which estab lished the nation’s land grant col leges. tional Science Foundation grant to catalog and evaluate previous studies of the geology and geo physics in the deep water areas of the Gulf of Mexico. Drs. William E. Bryant and Arnold H. Bouma, both associate professors of oceanography, will direct the study. Bryant said the assessment will include all studies conducted in the gulf from 600 feet deep be yond. tion, was elected chairman of TETA’s Management Committee. The association’s second annual convention was held in alias. Dr. Georg Brogstrom, world food supply authority, will speak on the Texas A&M campus July 22 as part of the institution’s Visiting Lecture Series and In stitute in Ecology. The 8 p.m. lecture, “Ecologi- i.m. E. Shoe lejte EGE r«) Deitf lo^y P WATE1 . NT HOiN SSI0N IN :c.e -«1 I) e gr« i ar| m * catioi :o» POST; * cation cjeptioN POST; E-’FERP XI i ops BlJf CE sr I DegreO ■cation j -SEARCH! 3 WITH IM I)f> -JSTRIAH LAKFAIEW CLUB 3 Miles N. On Tabor Road Saturday: Billy Bounds and The Night Hawks With Johnny Carves Admission — Regular Price STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nite (ALL BRANDS BEER 26*) cal Aspects of the World Food Issue,” is sponsored by the Wild life and Fisheries Sciences De partment. Thirty-five secondary school science teachers attending the National Science Foundation’s ecology institute here July 5 to Aug. 13 will attend the program. Dr. Richard J. Baldauf, wild life professor and institute direc tor, said Dr. Brogstrom is a rec ognized authority on world food resources and their utilization, food freezing and frozen food bacteriology. A native of Sweden, Dr. Brog strom joined Michigan State Uni versity in 1956 and currently is professor of food science and eco nomic geology at MSU. Prior to coming to the United States in 1956, he organized and headed consecutively two major food research institutes in Swe den. Last week the Associated Press transmitted a lengthy feature on Dr. Brogstrom’s research and views. “Do we really expect that one- third of the (world’s) people will always be allowed to eat two- thirds of the food?” he asked in the AP story. He suggested there will be a world-wide famine unless there is international cooperation in meet ing food demands. The reality is, he said, that earth’s resources are dwindling rapidly and no scientific trickery can meet the food demands of an eVer-spiralihg population. Oceanographers given $5,600 NSF grant Two Texas A&M oceanograph ers have received a $5,600 Na Chastain new head of ETV group Dr. Mel Chastain, KAMU-TV station manager, has been elect ed president of the Texas Edu cational Television Association. Norman Godwin, program di rector for the Texas A&M Uni versity educational television sta Urban Planning head named J. H. Hinojosa has been named acting head of the Urban Plan ning Department at Texas A&M University. Announcement of the appoint ment was made by Dean Edward J. Romieniec of the College of Architecture and Environmental Design, which includes the Urban Planning Department. Romieniec has served as acting department head since last fall. Hinojosa, 36, is an associate professor and has been a member of the Texas A&M faculty since 1968. MSC DIRECTORATE SWIM PARTY THURSDAY EVENING, 6 O’CLOCK AT THE A&M ANNEX LIVE BAND AND FOOD INCLUDED ADMISSION 50c SPECIAL GUESTS, GIRLS FROM FOWLER HALL Europe NEW STUDENT FARES $220 ROUND TRIP N Y./BRUSSELS/NEW YORK CALL 846-3773 BEVERLY OR MOZELLE BEVERLEY BRALEY UNIVERSITY TRAVEL MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER—A&M UNIVERSITY SUITS and SPORT COATS 25 to 50% OFF ONE RACK SUITS values to $110.00...now $35.00 ONE RACK SPORT COATS.. .values to $85.00... now $17.50 SWIM SUITS Vs OFF BERMUDA SHORTS '/a PRICE ex, ALL WATCH BANDS '/a PRICE KNIT SHIRTS 20% OFF SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 25% OFF VS Country Squire TOWNSHIRE / BRYAN, TEXAS 77801 OPEN - THURSDAY UNTIL 8 P.M. fe8e6®®6®®e®e®®®®e©6©®ee®®®e«®®©ee®6®ee®e©s®«s®6e®e©<s(s®©®6ee(s6®®e(s®®ee®6®es®®e®®eee®e®eee®®e6®®e®©ee®®®®e©©®e©e®®©®®®®®®®®©©*