The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 29, 1977, Image 5

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    Texas Aj,
s Boeltd,
s entation|
Tatom receives
olton award
Fred
-omtheD
al Enginej
neering
ring.
■ sunoi
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A ^ i n n
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1977
Page 5
Campus Names
Stephen L. Tatom was pre-
ented the 1977 Bolton Award
leadership qualities and high
cholastic achievement in elec-
rical engineering.
Tatom was graduated from
exas A&M in December and is
iow employed by Exxon in the
laytown refinery.
Student awards
presented
Distinguished graduate stu-
awards were presented by
‘he Association of Former Stu
dent
dents to members of the Texas
A&M graduate college.
Faruk Jose Nome, chemistry
student from College Station;
Wesley Robert Harris, chemis
try, Burkburnett; and Joseph
Clifton Dickens, entomology,
Ertford, N.C. received the
awards at the doctoral level.
Distinguished graduate stu
dents honored at the master’s
level included Robert Vance
Avant Jr., agricultural engineer
ing; Kenneth Bryan Butler,
geophysics; and Alan Rackow
Graefe, recreation and resources
development. Avant and Butler
are from Bryan and Graefe is from
Kohler, Wis.
Assistant-teaching awards
were given to William Leonard
Hargrove, soil science, College
Station; Lawrence James Tiezzi,
geology, of Williamston, Mass.;
and Richard Herbert Wells,
sociology, Plattsburg, N.Y.
Recipients were selected by a
committee composed of both
graduate students and members
of the graduate faculty.
12 retirees
to be honored
Twelve retiring Texas A&M
University faculty members will
be honored by Texas A&M and
the Association of Former Stu
dents at a reception and dinner
Monday evening.
Retirees include Dr. R. C.
Potts, associate dean of agricul
ture and professor of agronomy;
Dr. Clifford M. Simmang, pro
fessor, and head of mechanical
engineering, and Dr. J. George
H. Thompson, professor of
mechanical engineering; Karl E.i
English, and Dr. Homer T|
Blackhurst, professor ofhorticul-i
ture. _ |
Also, Ben B. Boriskie, as
sociate professor of physics; Dr.
John J. Sperry, professor of biol
ogy; Jesse S. Jemigan, associate
professor of English; Dr. Vance
W. Edmondson, associate pro
fessor of agricultural economics;
Joel R. Barton, Jr., assistant pro
fessor of agricultural education;
Robert H. Rucker, professor of
floriculture and Rita B. Estok, as
sistant professor of library science
will be honored.
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S':
starts Corps’ day
STEVE MARTAINDALE
le early morning sun peeked
the dormitories when Jim
iler stepped up to the sheet-
J cone.
adets assembled around the
drangle, then movement
lly ceased, as Koehler directed
orn toward the small end of the
cone and played the rapidly-paced
assembly call.
Another day had started for the
Corps and its bugler.
The electrical engineering major
from Houston then sounded the rev
eille cal as the American flag was
hoisted into the air.
He sounds his trumpet through
facuums keep old coffee warm
United Press International
YORK — Even the most avid
drinkers object to bitter, re-
coffee. But at current prices,
can afford to pour it down the
le simple solution is to pour
id cofiFee into a vacuum bottle.
Since reheating is not involved, the
coffee will stay fresh and hot for up to
24 hours.
For the most efficient heat reten
tion, the Thermos Division recom
mends preheating vacuum bottles
with hot water before pouring in the
coffee.
the same bugle cone that corpsmen
have used during formation for more
than 40 years.
“The bugle stand is a memorial,”
Koehler said. It was erected to honor
Edwin O’Brien Bellinger by the
Class of 1936. He was their bugler
and was killed in a training exercise
in summer camp.
“The Class of 1936 dedicated the
stand May 10, 1936,” he said. “At
their 40th reunion last year, they re
placed the stand and did a little work
on the cone. But other than that, it’s
the same.”
Koehler, who actually uses a
trumpet, plays for morning and eve
ning formations, and has recently
begun playing taps at night.
“Gen. Ormand R. Simpson
suggested we start playing taps
again. It was stopped basically be
cause there was no longer a definite
‘lights out,’ Koehler said.”
There still is no “lights out” but
taps is played at about 11 p.m.
Koehler, a member of the Texas
Aggie Band, tried out for the posi
tion a year ago. He said the band was
his main reason for joining the
Corps. But he said that he would still
have joined the Corps, even if there
was no band.
As bugler, he has little free time.
He has to be at all formations, and
when his unit gets a “bag-in,”—or
the privilege to sleep late and skip
formation—he misses the “bag-in.”
The duty has its brighter side
though, accroding to Koehler, for he
feels that he is a significant respresn-
tative of the Corps
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rl N el r! sioo Gift
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with purchase of any new
rt or dualpurpose 125.
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I, 1977:
1. Dduxe, twocycle Holsclaw
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retail value)
2. A High performance. Gen
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dio/cassette recorder free (re-
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A gift certificate worth
$100 of your choice of Har
ley-Davidson parts, acces
series or clothing.
HM3
irtey
Certificate
Buy your
Harley Davidson
Great American Dream
Machine now and get up to a
$300 rebate.
SS125 base price $629
SSI75 base price $757
SS250 base price $949
SX125 base price $539
SX175 base price $697
SX250 base price $889
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d With
j Foods
IX.
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AY
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jam
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other
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of any
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new car financing
for graduating seniors.
And defer
the first payment
for six months.
Pick out the car you want, drive it this semester, then begin
your payments after you go to work. The Bank of A&M
can put you in a new set of wheels today. Terms include
100 per cent financing (including insurance); deferment
of the first payment up to six months; loan repayment
extended up to 48 months (including the deferred
payment period); and credit life insurance.
Bring your job commitment letter or your application
for active duty month. We can work out a repayment
program that fits your circumstances. See Mike
Laughlin ’65 or Lt. Col. Glynn Jones
(USAF-Ret.) ’43
The BANK of A&M
/Vo bank is closer to Texas A&M or its students.
846-5721
TheTeachings of Jose Cuervo:
There is
white,
and then
there is
white.”
l*Pl ith-
If you don’t want a ring around your drink, re
member this. The first white is Jose Cuervo White.
Since 1795 Jose Cuervo has been the first, the pre
mium tequila.
And Jose Cuervo is made to mix best. With cola,
tonic, collins, water, orange juice, grapefruit juice,
juices and etc., etc., etc.
JOSE CUERVO 4 TEQUILA. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1976 HEUBLEIN. INC., HARTFORD, CONN.