p—- THE BATTALION , v-- ■ ■V , • j •• ;• • : s • !._* :.j-y .h # 4> # & : •<' • I t. -CW . ..-I j- •. C.i'v ■ > ' .# i«'-.'ati ri J - i 'O . 't ■ He had always wanted •• y • n. •f .f. ' a business of his Howard D. Ege —and now, while he doesn’t own the business, he’s got what he had hoped for in a business of his own. He’s gained the oppor tunity to bring out the best there is in human effort—to handle men rather than materials. That’s what Howard D. Ege had in mind during the time of his early schooling at Grand Island College. It was actively developed during 1919-21 when he worked nights in a Lawrence power plant while completing the work for his B. S. in Engineer ing at Kansas University. Ege doesn’t scorn the well- known dictum of Socrates — “Know thyself.” But he gets more of a kick out of the practi cal application of “Know others.” Today — five years after en rolling in the Westinghouse Graduate Students’ Course—he directly controls a staff of fifty persons. And he’s responsible own $• #■ # 0 ■■J '3 'ui 9iiT be bnA Sc ’eioT a ■:-m i Tomut, oil * S4 -rC-; b V, .’•VSOE&JI tsd hrJ\ of '^laO d JbalcH tin bnA for coordinating the efforts of 1500 employees—half of them men and half of them women — on the production floor. Ege is Production Supervisor in the Coils and Insulation De partment at the East Pittsburgh Works. He is the link between the entire Westinghouse organ ization and thirteen foremen who directly supervise the work of hundreds of employees. He is engaged in a production job which turns out finished parts with a shop value of more than $1,000,000 a year. How Westinghouse offers opportunity to engineers differ ing widely in outlook is demon strated again in Ege’s case. From the time he conceived his /fll” “ What's the future with a large organization?" That is what college men want to know, first of all. The question is lest answered by the accomplishments of others with similar training and like opportunities. This is one of a series of advertisements portraying the progress at West inghouse of typical college grad uates, off the campus some five —eight—ten years. . \ -rvl . -y: \ ■ sE? a aftnrjo'3 Im bnA v-msts r i .sc &U03 til ■ ov not ambition to work with men his path has followed a straight line. His training course at East Pitts burgh was in Works Manage ment. This lasted about a year. Then he became Chief Clerk in the Coils and Insulation Depart ment. Only one year later he became Supervisor, reporting directly to the Works Superin tendent of Production. To the man who wants to work with men rather than with materials, Westinghouse offers promising opportunities. . y ?,\v .'d aTaW. vV •y»'; • :\:a i, A h •*. V. ■ V.J •\ dir *3: ,* v-..\ Westinghouse : s .r • v .-l ‘ . ; V - . wtr -.‘o his baA !’jc o -.r' T: n'r ■jil bnA 03 IliOX it v,l ; iDKfiai 1 ? aeo-; need tah* oi \V>• .ore: wz /:■ 3 c .' 1 A :.7kV.H7 > ttrotti S yjc-9 lie, e'S-vnlrn rvUf/ivr its br.> % ■V' J $ THEMETROPOLITAN BARBER % * SHOP iP ♦ * • ♦ Real Sendee. Call and See ua. « > * W. B. CLINE, M. D. * * Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat * Reffraction and Glassaa *1* * Office, Third Floor City Na- + * tional Bank Building * * Phones: Res. 622; Office 606 * * Bryan, Texas ♦ * ❖ * ❖ * ❖ ♦ + + + + + + + '+ + + DR. W. H. LAWRENCE DENTIST Fourth Floor, City National Bank Building Phones: Office 348, Res. 668 X-Ray Equipment ❖ * ❖ * ♦ **+*♦+*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ EAT A BURGER AT + DAD COLES + When You Are Hungry ♦ Between Leggett and Bat- ♦ Roost Halls ♦ ♦ BRYAN, TEXAS ? ^ ♦ 4.4. ♦ 4* ^ ^ ♦