THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1976 Page 9 rof at Tarleton to teach equine courses arleton State University has ic a step closer to the title of se Capital of Texas. SU took a significant step to ds realization of its proposed 11311 helor oi science degree program *01 Production and Manage- it with the hiring of an outstand- horse specialist. arleton president. Dr. W.O. Trogden, announced last Thursday that Dr. Lester B. Waymack will join the agricultural faculty September 1 to teach four equine science courses during the fall and spring semesters. The courses will be Horse Produc tion, Equine Health and Nutrition, Horse Enterprise Management and Principles of Equine Reproduction. Waymack is a native of Pine Bluff, Ark., and holds degrees in animal science from the University of Ar kansas, Mississippi State University and Louisiana State University. He has held various research and teach ing positions at LSU and Alabama A&M University, and has been an associate professor at the University of Arizona since 1973. He has been actively involved in nutrition research and in teaching horse-oriented courses. Waymack is also currently preparing a com prehensive textbook on horse pro duction and management. In addi tion to these professional activities, he is a competitive steer wrestler, has coached collegiate rodeo teams and is a farrier specializing in correc tive shoeing of horses. TSU’s proposal for a concentration of study in Horse Production and Management, a major within the B.S. degree in agriculture, has been under consideration by the Coor dinating Board, Texas College and University System, since early 1975, according to Dr. Weldon H. New ton, head of the Department of Ag riculture. Final action on the proposal, which was developed in consultation with horse industry leaders, is ex pected in April, 1977. During the interim, the Coordinating Board is permitting Tarleton to offer the new courses as animal science electives. The proposed degree program features 23 semester hours of equine subjects, including a 10-week ap prenticeship consisting of on-the-job training with cooperative horse pro ducers and related enterprises. Supporting areas of study em phasize business management. communications and other fields of animal science, each of which pro vides additional flexibility of academic training and career perpa- ration. Tarleton officials said Waymack’s academic training, experience and personal abilities promise to estab lish TSU as one of the leading cen ters for equine education in the na tion. )ne must get dirty to understand rocks, geologists say ^ exas A&M University geologists eve that to learn the nuts and olts of rocks and stones, one has to ;t I down in the dirt and live with iem a bit. As a result, the undergraduate iPJficulum includes four formal courses that take the students [Jam pus, and often out of Texas, sal with geological realities. iis trend of the A&M geology l^rtment is in the face of a movement by other universities to de-emphasize field geology, accord ing to David W. Stearns, depart ment head. During the 1975-76 school year, sophomores made one-day trips to Llano, Austin, Waco and around the Brazos Valley to observe all three types of rocks—sedimentary, metamorphic and igneous. In an elective course, a group of geophysics and geology students took a January camping trip to the Gulf Coast to study “soft rocks” and coastal deposits. Much of the time was spent in the Florida Keys exam ining limestone deposition and coral reef formation, Seniors split into two groups for one-week trips during the spring semester. Some went to Possum Kingdom Dam and Lake Brownwood to study the Pennsyl vanian rocks and fossils in those areas. A group of honor students traveled to New Mexico and Arizona. There they looked at en gineering geology in action with a guided tour of the Pima Pit, an open-pit copper mine. They went through the Cyprus Pima Mining Co. mill where low-grade copper ore is processed into 32 per cent copper concentrate. The students then followed the mill concentrate through the Magma Copper Co.’s smelter and refinery, where the almost pure copper is cast into plates for final refining. Departmental juniors take two field courses. This year’s group of students from geology and geophysics was divided to tour Carlsbad, Cloudcroft, Santa Fe, Aztec and Grand Junction, N.M., and Boulder, Colo. The Colorado trip included the field study of an ancient Permian Age reef which forms the core of the Guadalupe Mountains of West Texas and East ern New Mexico; cycles of deposi tion of sediments of Pennsylvanian Age; several collapsed calderas from volcanic action and the formation of folds. These observations provide the background for the second field phase of the junior year. A six-week summer field course follows the Colorado trip and con cludes the junior year. The juniors spend one week in the Llano area studying igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks. The remaining time is spent examining the intri cately folded sedimentary rocks of the Marathon area near Big Bend Park. ianning keeps Brownsville ship channel clean Prairie View A&M experts call the Brownsville Ship nne ^ one ^ ie effiauest facilities o the coast. |s a result of work and a desire to their “cleanest” accolade, the jrownsville Navigation District ^jded a team of Texas A&M Uni- lity engineers with $25,(X)0 to atinue a chemical and physical en- jnmental study of the channel Jed in 1972. ■obert L. Garrett, principal in vestigator for the project, is a member of A&M’s environmental engineering division of the Depart ment of Civil Engineering. “Studies conducted in 1974 and 1975 have shown that the quality of the Brownsville Ship Channel and adjoining waters is very good,” Gar rett explained. “However, the in dustrial growth and increasing de mand placed on the system, along with a few minor problems revealed by earlier studies, have been recog nized and a further study seems necessary. “During the first two years we did environmental physical and chemi cal assessments and produced some mathematical models for planning future activities, primarily indus trial, along the channel,” he said. “Brownsville has been far ahead by anticipating any pollution prob lems and as a result has one of the cleaner facilities on the coast, but, it was kept clean by planning, ” Garrett pointed out. “We didn’t find many situations where the channel did have prob lems,” Garrett said. “However, this year’s activity will focus on the minor areas where problems did or could develop and on the results of ecolog ical measures that have been initi ated. “Specifically, there was one area. a shrimping harbor about 12 feet deep, where shrimp waste material was accumulating, he continued. “This caused an oxygen problem for the marine life in the harbor. The solution was to build a sewage and waste collection system to each ship berth that picked up shrimp and fish processing throw-away waste. ” For Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 gets grant for teachers Prairie View A&M University’s Teacher Corps program has been awarded another $234,916 by the U.S. Department of Health, Educa tion and Welfare. The two-year extension will in volve PVAM and Waller Indepen dent School District in a program that allows the two to work together in training better-equipped public- school teachers. Begun in 1965, the federal pro gram strengthens education avail able in concentrated areas of low- income families while encouraging higher education and public educa tion to work together on the prepara tion of teachers. 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