J.S3b31Nl 3HJ. r« y'&^trs aiqeueAe sueoi -—- —- - - —- - - ——■ ■ ‘Judge’ has mastered fine art of storytelling Phoio by Lynn Blanco “You might say that I’m a judge of good bourbon and feminine pulcritude (beauty). But that’s the extent of the judge business,” says Arthur Stewart who teaches here. ‘‘I said, ‘Son, I can’t change your By RHONDA WATTERS Battalion Staff Arthur Stewart, a lawyer who teaches in the Management De partment here, is probably the only professor at Texas A&M University that has more stories to tell to his students than his students have to tell him. And after teaching about 25,000 students in 34 years, that’s a lot of stories. Known as the “Judge,” Stewart is really not a judge. It’s a nickname his students gave him years ago that has carried over to the present. “All my students call me Judge,” Stewart said. “But I am not a judge, I have never been a judge, nor do I have any aspirations to be a judge. “You might say that I’m a judge of good bourbon and feminine pulcri tude (beauty). But that’s the extent of the judge business.” Stewart said it’s not hard to ac quire the nickname judge. “Everybody and his dog that has a law degree at one time or another is called a judge. My definition of the way it’s kicked around is any notary public five miles from home is given the title judge.” Stewart got his pre-legal educa tion at Texas A&M, then went to Baylor for his law degree. After practicing law for four years, he went into the military. When he was discharged from the service, he was asked to take over teaching some courses at Texas A&M for the remainder of a semester, and “I liked it so well I’ve been here ever since. “I had never taught anything in my life except two years of Sunday school at the First Baptist Church,” Stewart said, with a laugh. “This was certainly a new wrinkle to me.” Stewart teaches two business law courses and one veterinary jurisprudence course, usually aver aging a total of 400 students a semester. He has received one Dis tinguished Teaching Award and two Outstanding Professor Awards in his teaching career. When Stewart entered Texas A&M as a freshman in 1933, he was a member of the Corps of Cadets. His life as a cadet is a favorite source for some of his stories. “I was actually the worst military student this institution had ever en countered,” Stewart said. “I cut such a terrible dido in that uniform that when it came time for War De partment inspection day, my lieute nant said, ‘Stewart, we’ve taken your pitiful case up with higher au thority and we have decided to give you a holiday. Just don’t show up on the campus. Here’s a dollar, go to a movie. The likes of you might get us a black eye.’” Stewart said that upon entering the Corps, his choice of military unit was the field artillery, where he had to learn to ride a horse. “I looked like a round bale of cot ton,” he said. “If you think I’m obese now, you should have seen me then. They put me on one of those steeds and I couldn’t even stay on it! “And when they took the saddle off, blindfolded us and told us to go over a series of hurdles with our hands stretched out, well, I just told the lieutenant, ‘My mama didn’t raise no damn fool.’ “There wasn’t any way of my staying on that quadruped,” he said. When he went in the military, Stewart said, they asked him what branch of the military he wanted in, and he told them “anything you got, brother, but the field artillery.” But, “the field artillery it was.” When Stewart was fresh out of law school, he and a friend, John Barron, formed a partnership to practice law. "When we went into the practice of law, times were really hard,” he said, reminiscing. “We did not have money or credit to buy any law books. We practiced law from the hip. All we had was one lawbook, Black’s Law Dictionary. “But so the walls wouldn’t look so barren, my parents gave me a set of encyclopedias and we carted those things up to our law office and put them up under the guise of being lawbooks. “They didn’t have one word ab out law, but if someone wanted to know the capital of Zanzibar, we’d be happy to look it up for them!” Stewart said things were so bad that the first month, he and his part ner’s gross income was $2.50. Being a teacher for 34 years, Stewart has heard just about every excuse invented from his students for missing class, being unprepared and skipping tests. But he has some favorites. “One of the most pitiful excuses I had along that line was from a foot ball player several years ago,” he said. “I called the roll and he was absent for the final exam.” Stewart said he called the stu dent’s coach and about 40 minutes later, the student came to class. “He said, ‘Judge, I’ll tell you, I was studying for your exam over there in the library and I went to sleep, and they locked me up in the library.’ “Well,” Stewart said, smiling, “he reeked of distilled spirits, and the funny thing is the library stays open all night during finals!” Stewart likes to tell another story about a student that got an F at mid-term and asked him to change the grade so the student’s parents wouldn’t get upset. But since the grades had already been turned in, the grade couldn’t be changed. grade, but I’ll tell you what I will do. If you leave the name and address of your parents, I will write them and tell them that you made the highest F in the class!” Stewart’s students call him a storyteller. But Stewart says “that’s a euphemism for something else!" typing, and more Business Correspondence, Form Letters, Research Papers, Dissertations, Manuscripts, Theses, Transcripts and Mag netic Card Storage. We guarantee confidentiality and accuracy. Scientific, legal and medical terminology are our, specialities. the office 693 5262 707 south texas avenue suite 221d college station,texas 77840 focus THE BATTALION Focus is published every Thursday as an entertainment section of The Battalion. Policy: Focus will accept any stories, drawings or photographs that are submitted for publication, although the decision to publish lies solely with the editor. Pieces submitted, printed or not, will be returned upon request. Deadline is 5 p.m. the Thursday be fore publication. Contributing to this issue were: Lee Roy Leschper Jr., Doug Gra ham, Sam Stroder, Rhonda Watters, Lynn Blanco, Geoff Hackett, Kris Wiese and Editor: Beth Calhoun On the Cover: Even though the weather is getting cooler, students are still lured to the Texas A&M Creamery for ice-cream and shakes. For a closer look at the Creamery and where the dairy products come from, please turn to page 4. Photo by Sam Stroder. i spjooau 1 Perfect hunting weather and other ancient myths By LEE ROY LESCHPER JR. Battalion staff The Texas deer season each year includes two days of perfect hunting weather day — the day before and the day after I make my first hunt. This year was no exception. The first weekend, when I’d been out of the state, was cold and cloudy. But by Monday the temperature was back in the 60s, just in time for my first excursion. But that first deer hunt of the year is special, whether the weather’s perfect or lousy. That magic wore a little thinner after the short pre-dawn walk through the pas ture to my stand sent sweat running down my back. A younger brother had killed a fat young 3-point buck out of that stand the first morning of the season, so I settled down with high hopes despite what seemed destined to be a mosquito-bitten morning. Dawn took its time arriving. First daylight revealed a hillside dotting with patch es of brushes. Toward the bottom of the hill thick brush hid a swampy area divided by a tiny creek. The stand was about a third of the way up the hill from the swamp. In years past deer had traveled across the open hill, but, since my brother’s buck had walked out of thick brush near the swamp, I concentrated my attention there. After an hour of concentrating, my attention was wondering why we were there. A rebellious attention is a very dangerous thing on a deer stand. Then a sleek doe poked her head above the waist- high grass about a hundred yards down toward the swamp. Just before dawn I’d heard a deer snorting in that direction, but I’d long since given up on seeing anything there. Never showing much more than her ears and slick black nose above the grass, she glided toward the swamp. Another small doe followed her, while a third stepped out of the brush at the edge of the swamp to meet them. All three seemed uneasy, as though ex pecting either danger or more deer. Here comes the buck, I thought. That’s what I was still thinking 20 minutes later, long after all three does had faded into the swamp. The 8 a.m. sun had already started heating the morning air. Wait another 15 minutes, I advised my self. That’s when a little spike buck popped his head out of the brush near where the does had appeared. Be fore I could draw a bead on the yearling buck, a 9-point buck twice his size busted out of the thicket right behind him. Both broke into a trot through the small opening between them and the swamp. By the time I find the bigger buck in the 4x scope, he was halfway to cover. As he crossed an open patch in the grass the 6mm Remington bucked against my shoulder. The buck jumped in the humpbacked way all lung-shot deer seem to and bounded toward cover. He stopped after 20 feet, partially screened by brush, but facing me. Just as I squeezed off another shot, he dropped. Had Austin County, where I was hunting, not had a one-buck limit, I’d have filled my 2-deer license right then. That small (that’s spelled t-e-n-d-e-r) spike buck let me walk almost on top of him before he headed for cover, still wondering why his bigger companion wasn’t following. All this proves one simple law about hunting, and fishing for that matter: the best time to go is still whenever you can go. Forget about the temperature, the stage o( the moon and whatever else, and just get out there after ’em. A nice buck killed the first morning is one of hunting's sweeter pleasures. i—Texas Reports—) Chef should treat venison like lean beef—with care LUBBOCK—Many Texas hunters have already bagged their deer this hunting season, and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department suggests they cook the venison like lean beef. Loin and rib cuts are best broiled or oven-roasted. Pot roasting or braising with moist heat is best for cooking venison from older deer and for the less tender cuts from younger animals. Proper care following the successful hunt will determine how much work the cook will have to do in removing fat—the major cause of the gamey flavor in all wild game including deer. Also, the fat quickly turns rancid, so it is wise to remove it from the carcass. Venison should not be overcooked. Deer meat has short fibers and toughs quickly when overcooked or cooked at high tempera tures. Set oven temperature at 300 degrees for roasting. Serve the venison medium to well-done rather than rare or over-done. Venison being prepared for freezing should have all fat removed and proper wrapping mataerial should be used to prevent freezer burn. Biologists say little harm found in Texas from Mexican oil spill AUSTIN—According to data collected by the Parks and Wildlife Department, the environmental impact of oil from the Mexican well in Campeche Bay has for the most part been minimal on Texas fish and wildlife resources. Based on information now available, there is no evidence of noticeable damage to Texas fish or wildlife, other than possibly redfish larvae, as a result of the oil spill. The department will continue to monitor the impact of the oil spill on larval redfish to determine the extent additional stocking is neces sary to offset losses. Biologists on the department’s vessel “Western Gulf” checked shrimp samples from oil sheen waters at the height of contamination and found that the shrimp had not been harmed. Shrimp and oyster production are down this year as a result of flooding and other environmental factors, not because of the oilspill. Although the shrimp harvest was down, the dollar value was up because of increased prices. Extensive oil control efforts kept oil from entering most bays and estuaries, saving valuable nursery grounds from possible damage. The oil also had little or no effect on shore and wading birds, and had absolutely no impact on the endangered whooping cranes or migratory waterfowl. ‘$100 bass’ stocked in lake Calaveras limits tougher AUSTIN—The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department has begun a five-year research study on heavily- fished Calaveras Lake near San Antonio to determine the effects of a 14-inch minimum length limit for largemouth bass. Project leader John Mitchell of Kerrville said the program has the support of the Texas Association of Bass Clubs (TABC), which is pro viding reward money for the return of tagged fish. Mitchell said department crews will tag 500 bass each year for four years. Tag returns will yield valu able information about percentage of the bass population harvested and mortality rates. The 14-inch limits probably will be imposed on the lake in the spring of 1981, Mitchell said. Mitchell stressed that the overall aim of the project is to protect a quality fishery from overhan/est and thus benefit all fishermen. “Some may feel a length limit is an attempt or produce only a ’trophy bass’ fishery, but that’s not the case,” Mitchell said. “We feel that there’s a chance that incrasing the mimimum from 10 inches to 14 will increase the lake’s production of medium-sized fish and even total average poundage caught by each fisherman.” The 500 bass in this year’s slag ging effort already have been col lected by electroshocking, tagged and released, Mitchell said. The tags are green discs one hald inch in diameter placed just below the dorsal fin on the fish, which are approximateluy 10 inches long. The tags are imprinted with the address of the department’s research facility at Ingram, and fishermen who mail the tags in will be eligible for re wards, depending on the tag's code numbers. Among each 500 tagged bass, 90 will carry a $5 reward; six will be worth $10; two will be worth $20; one will be worth $50 and the grand prize-winning tag will be worth $100. Anglers submitting tags should be sure to enclose their return address. Information on winning tag numbers will be sent to TABC for issuance of reward checks. When the increased length limit goes into effect at Calaveras it will be the third Texas lake having a higher-than-normal length limit. Since it opened to fishing in Sep tember, the Fayette County Power Project Lake in Fayette County has had a 16-inch minimum length limit and a three bass per day creel limit to offset the effects of intense fishing pressure. Lake Nacog doches in Nacodoches County has the same limits. “The TABC is keenly interested in conserving bass fishing resource across the state,” Mitchell said, “and we hope their support will help us determine if length limits might enhance the bass fishery in Calaveras and other heavily-fished lakes.”. DIXIE CHICKEN SALOON 307 University Drive College Station • Beer on Crushed Ice • Progressive Country Music • Hangdown Sausage • Cheddar Cheese on the Wheel • Authentic Turn of the Century Texana