The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1949, Image 6

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    So You Know A&M?
I*-
Hw v' i i'
■
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Wif-
Job Calls
! <'
INTERVIEWS
MX
When Creep
Meets Creen
(1) March 314-PederaI Reserve
Bank of DallaH will interview soph
omore and junior students for sum
mer work. Must have B grade
average. -h
(2) March 31i—Lone Star Gas
Company, Sherman, Tejcas, will in
terview meehanlral engineera for
heating and ventilation work.
(3) April IHfure Oil Comi
will interview mechanical, civil,
chemical engineers and chemists
for pflnery wark. Will also Inter-
view Junior stueenU for summer
work in the
(4) April
Light Compai).
rim(iical and
to atari in thtd
BEFD' VO' MYSTIFIES TH* AUDIENCE WIF CLEWW TRICKS ON NB,
, VO' BETTER TAKE BACK MORE FALSE TEETH “AS VELL
^AS MORE UNDERWEAR. ■
MISTER WHACKSTONE.r
>T
s ll’owur and
III Interview me.
trical engineers
lalnlng program.
IN CASE MO'
SWIPIN'ALL 7WI
MAY AH STATE THET
DONE BY MAH LI'L I
HERE“WHOM MO’CAM
BUT WHICH AM KIKI-r'i -
AS TH' NOSE ON MORE
RNOINKKKINU
natlottai CrwmHtlng
i Company, Texark
and
xarkana.
or a chem
W
»®8 ««.'«
nve
Thifji!
•\
omniittee Meet
i/
Thd Thiwl Annwal
the Joint Committee On In'
timi of Hngllrth Teaehii g in
high iMehoolx and eolleges
uiWeii way at 1 p. m, l'Tl<
Solarit
'■ r
«y
iwion |ln the Houth
YMC
In imnkldg the imanMneMi*nt,
If. T. I'', Mayo, head tht' 4i
IIMi llepartinent^ atnlt d jtlut^ the
p •evljtmx two aeHHiotlN hhyei Ijlteeo
very encouraging. ’ : 11
Aijjoroxlmateiy 2ii : \|*ltdiM,|und
the r.iigllah teneherk frehi Mynh
hi Iuk Ih, win attend thd thrt'o, 1 iom-
nitttee seidlons. 'i] 4i F i
Owiectivca of the mlt
tee ar« (l)i to elect tr now
oiunito aerVe during tl« iic’xilll |*o«r
(1) to work out a c<i nprdlWHHive
*/
tl of I In which teuehers brought out the
ijgra- fact Lhut the last two years of
ipixmi high school and the first year of
fiii get i collage 1h part of the same pro
per- foil, And for that reason there is
n need for integration ’ of what 7
Is taught to these students.
A puli nf last years’ Joint .Ses
sion consisted of grading student
papers. A result of the grading
Showed that different teachers
gave the same paper / different
grades for different reasons.
Work shops next October will
j he conducted in jrleven districts
-f-
j’OR
EX
ND GLA
’ Consult
DR. J. W. PA]
Optometrist
109 South Mai
Bryan,
ake
KnglliHh Ttwt to he given to
Heboid juniors and (.1) iti>
Ians foir the second ^nmitd
sh work-shop of high achio
clollege.teafchers.
Importance of the .w6H
sain Dr. Mayo, is hnrne or „ .
thej fact jthat 22% (f fits ^se
mester freshmen fail io],iitrjljp > a
pasjsing mark in English
That is, the cpse with A&1V
di nts as Veil as with
other Texas colleges.
In last; year's wov { r sh<>pL |held
Houston, 1100 teaic tern pi^ticl*
ted. Panel discussions w irilheld
-
Consult
Dr.
OPTQi
With Your Visuai
20$,S. Main —
Phone 2-tt_
> "'‘"F '*»i
throughout the state, Their pur
pose Is to determine the best
methods of helping high school
students lo read and write most
>ffectlv|i|y and to the best of
fthelr ability. . [r T . ‘
After tho first session Friday
afternoon, all members lot tho
Joint Committee will]he ghests of
Dr. Mayo for a dinner at the Oaks
at <1 p. m.
The lust session Haturdaiy morn
ing will be a resume of jail that
has heeh aecomplis
mitteoN and group
resumiii or all that
'ompliuhed In com-
roup discussions.
ill Limps
ii^nps
or Die Vote
Tfol
tf
FOR S
Milk Fftd F ted;
CHICX
BASKET B
COLD D
‘ I if ' £
IfAlN q« flHlNE:,
drive In Ur
noiv awnina
x .,1
doy your ouk
eon
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• OftO
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By BARNEY LIVINGSTONE
WASHINGTON. MARCH 24—(/P)—Riddled by kmend
ments, the Rankin Veterans Pension Bill pushed toward a
final vote in the house today. I ■
Its opponents, pursuing a strategy of loading It down
: <j e ;
with changes, counted on making the bill so unacceptable
that the House Would wash itsV 1I-' !—
hands of the whole affair and dump
it back into committee. That in
effect would kill off 1 pension leg
islation for the present. '•
But the bill’s backers announced
they were ready to battle it out
and force members to go on record
down to the final tally.
Before going into a strategy
! huddle with pension proponents
last night, Rep. Rankin (D-Miss),
I the bill’s sponsor, said “we can
I win.” T ■
As originally called up. Ran- ,
kin's bill provided for a pension
of $90 a month to all World War
I and II veterans at age 65,< re
gardless of financial need.
As it came back before !the House
for its third day of debate, it look
ed something like a combined pen
sion-bonus hill.
The House tentatively accepted
an amendment by Rep.vjjacoba (D-
Ind) knocking out the i $90 pen
sion figure and substituting what
amounted to a deferred bonus pro
posal.
The .1 scobs plan provldM that
all veterans would be paid a flat
$10 a month at age>9$, plus sn
additional $1 a month for each
month of war ssrvlro and anoth
er fit a month for eath montli
spent In an uveraeaa theater of] „
comliat.. v Li
Tht» House also adopted an
ameitilmeitl by Hep. Hogefa (IL
Kill) estubllahiag a financial need
yardstick. Pensions would lie bar
red to veteran* whose income Is
over $2,000 a year If unmarried
. T _JW a yew
or $3,000'ff;married or with,de
pendents.
Twice the House refused to ex
clude World War H veterans from
pension benefits. ;
We’re Open So Late
We’re Practically a
Nite Club
— NEW HOURS -
11 to 2
4:45 to 8
SHUG FISHER is one of M*
Sons of the Pioneers Who wl
appear here in Guion Hull, April
1,/>.
CMINR8K RKDH HAY i
FfSACR DUR HHORTIA
NANKING. March 24 -lAhThe
Communist radio heard Imre to
night' said "peace negotiation* will
take place very soon.
It ti*as the fljrsl Mod public an-
nbuneement that they have decide
ed tii talk ppate, OHlimigh other
lirnadeasts have hinted i t such a
move,
] The statement was Incorporated
In n sealtdnii attack m acting
President LI Tsung-Jen and Pre
mier Ho Ylng-Chin and his new
cabinet. The radio assorted the
"Kuomtntang (govcromeit party)
leaders will now have an oppor
tunity to provide their mat desire
for peade, ,
The selection of those delegates
Is the first order of bujddess be
fore the cabinet tomorrow.
(t) Intel in
Construction Company,
Texas, has an opening
1st or chemical engineer. Work
will consist of laboratory routine,
process control and sales training.
(2) Standard Brass A Manufac
turing Company,; New Orleans, La.,
is in the markm for one or two
young men with mechanical engi
neering background to "take off*
mechanical equipment from speci
fications, quote all'bidders, and do
some sales work in refrigeration,
air conditioning and heating field.
(3) The/Trane Company, La
Crosse, Wisconsin, again has open
ings in their Graduate Training
program for mechanical engineers
itnerested in air conditioning work.
(4) Celariese Corporation of
America, Clarkwood/ Texas, has
an opening for a chemist in their
research laboratory.
AGRICULTURAL AND
- LIBERAL A BJ'S
(1) Ge6. A. : Hormel Company
has openings for animal husbandry
and agricultural economics majors
as buyer trainees. Also openings
for management engineers.
(2) Mr. D. >D. Clinton, Harris
County Agricultural Agent, has
informed us of two openings for
farm managers. One |s for a rice-
livestock farm near Cypress, and
the other is in Fort Bend County.
Want a, man to raise] cotton, corn,
and hay crops.
(3) Rural Life Insurance Com
pany, Waco, Texas, has openings
in Central Texas for men interest
ed in insurance sales work. Prefer
men with farm background.
HUMMER EMPLOYMENT
(1) The Placement Office has
been informed] of the following op-
cningH for summer jobs:
Texan Electric Service Company,
Fort Worth, Texas: North Ameri
can Compress A Warehouse Com-
puny, Inc; Western Auto Supply
Company {several Ideations avail
able); Southwestern Bell Telephone
Company, Dallas, Texas; Jones A
Lmighlln Supply Company, Tulsa,
Oklahoma; Geo. A. Hormel A Com
pany. Dnilas, Texas; union Sul-
phyr Company, Inc., Sulphur, La.;
and Hughes Tool company, Hou
ston, Tex«$, j
J. A. Walsh & Company, Hous
ton, Texas; Texas Mining A Smelt
ing Division, Laredo, Texas; Pan
American Gas Company, Texas
City, Texas; The National Hotel
Company, Galveston, Texas; Reed
Roller Bit Company, Houston, Tex
as; ' Tin Processing Corporation,
Texas City, Texas; Earle North
Guernsey Farm, Sinton, Texas; Re
public Oil and Refining Company,
Texas City, Texas, and Swift &
Company, Fort Worth 1, Texas.
• MANAGEMENT-
(Continued from Pag# t)
things iiH» different.” With^rlre"
for raW materials artd/rupluee-
ments high, management must look
within the plant lo get mote and
cheaper production./ Payment of
wages based upon their relative'-
merit within the company Is one
way of achieving this, lie called
job evaluatioh "realistic" and ex
pressed confidence in American
workers >and the public to be wise
and fahr toward industrial man
agers .when the facts are given
about job evaluation’s advantages.
Speaking on the selection and
installation of job evaluation sys
tems. William A. Thomas, chief
.job analyst of Humble’s Baytown
refinery, listed four standard eval
uation systems and outlined and
recommended a fifth, a “hybrid
systeim.”' The hybrid system com
bines the features of the systems
based on job factor comparison
and point evaluation. Any of the
systems are good, Thomas said. “If
a plan fits your heed and works,
use it."
He expressed doubt as to labor
leader’s objectivity when assisting
in drawing up job evaluation plans.
-The afternoon session heard
Richard F. Bruckhart, who re
cently joined the Management
Whats Cooking
AAUP, 7 p. m., Thursday, Phy*
sics Lecture Room.
AlChE, 7:15 p. m., Thursday,
Petroleum Lecture Room.
AGGIE SQUARES, 7:30 p. m.,
Thursday,, St. Thomas Episcopal
Parish House.
CAMERA CLUB, 7:30 p. m. t
Monday, Room 32, Physics Build-
"cOLLEGE WOMEN’S SOCIAL
CLUB, 3 p.m., Friday, Sbisa Hall.
EL PASO CLUB, 7:15 p. ny
Thursday, 3rd floor of Academic
Building.
- FIVE OH CLUB, 7:30, Thurs-
day, at the Bryan Country Club.
JOHNSON COUNTY CLUB,
7:30 Thurs,, Room 307, Academic
Building. - , /
LAMAR COUNTY CLUB, 7!lB
p. m., Thursday, Room 20D r Ar$.'
domic Building. y
LAREDO CLUB, 7:30 p. m..
Thursday, Roam 128, Academic,
LATIN AMERICAN CLUB,
7:15 p. m., Friday, Assembly room
YMCA. [ .
PHYSICS SEMINAR, 4:15 p, m,
Thursday, Physics Lecture Room,
SAN ANTONIO A&M CLUB,
7:30 p.m.j Thursday, Room 203,
Academic Building. Duchess will
be selected. _
TYLKR CLUB 7:45 p.m.. Thurs
day. Room 104, Academic Build-
‘"wACd-McLENNAN COUNTY
CLUB, 7:30 p. m., Thursday, Room
301, Goodwin Hall. ]
■f B a ttal ion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 6
THURSDAY, MARCH 24,1949
SELL WITH A BATTALION CLASSI-
FIED AD. Rates . /. 3{ a word per
insertion with a 25< minimum. Space
rates in Classified Section . . . 60< per
column inch. Send all classifieds with
remittance to the Student Activities Of
fice. All ads should be turned in b>
10:00 a.m. of, the day before publication.
• BUSINESS SERVICES •
REGISTER NOW for hew class in
shorthand starting February 2. Call Mc-
Kenair-Baldwin I Business College. 2-(16&A.
Jam-./Afldred banner free pass to Cam
pus.
• FOR 8>
=
H0U8E FOR ha LB by ownsr, ‘Mi by
24,' Including attached garage Hoiiss In
excellent (jondttion and ,on paved street.
“ and pries this one before you buy isi
ner ML. College.
KtfM HALE Hit nf ilx antique china,
gold hluid psllern. Oafl 4-1172 between
10 gnd.Itkii m.
yolt HAI.X ChJviolei dump See
McCoy, tl.».X>j'ull»*e View
Edit SALW - t\wliiler m,si, 1 spring
tui#l, "eventI ilieesee ni(d stUlUj Oil ■(•(•<1
hui ion "iiisii tor m»\siMs 0 smi ur lii g
Vei village
MilTtlKoVt'bW COtt S\I,W I'l’lced/ in
sell Oliegyl See Jwikswr, II \«24
• FOR MI NT •
yoM KENT liiirge H»(tf(*0it> wV' liHlh',
N*«r niiniaa* riittss ttiiiiM,
Henry Hnm*ey tree elmw si.'Hi
ggaMiyMw^tidjiMiiiirWTtaiir orr\ 11 iimoaigigtii
i
‘Ainimg,
ilrlcS
imr.D can \
IIF.ADQUARTEKN
Tour Trlendly Vord Dealer
BRYAN MOTOR CO,
’ / N. Mala It.
■A
CHIROPRACTOR
Geo. W. Buchanan, D.C.
COLONIC X-RAY
305 E. 28th St.
Phone 2-6243
T
EXPERT SHOE REPAIRS
While Yqn Wait
Cowboy Boots made to order
JONES BOOT SHOP
Southaide
mmiym
TAKE ADVANTAGK «f ogr «x.
port service In Brake Ro-Uulngl
/ Whaal Balancing!
Whaal Alignmantl
AGGIE GAHAGK
North (lata k i Phone 4-U84
rnmmmmmimmmmmmmimmtmmUmmmmmtmtmimmmtmm
MIIMIN *11, IN* A,r.*A.M,
Dll ted] meelitig TiieetUy,
Mareu Vi'ni 1MH1 a m Wnrli
Ih g, ii. idegree,
J. Jl Wnlhel, W,M,
W, It, I
-HsilgeH. MM,
RUNT IN KKUOKDINtiN
(IIwin Mlllff Rworda!
aaowN gi n"
“MHAI'SHIIV IN KM K"
“1‘AVANNM' 1
"AT IJIST?*
w
North
’8 HOOK STORK
hmm 44mm
4-
HATTERS
I' 1
! k
/
■
m
glneeringvIkeMrlmenti]
•t Font nil by Job
Hun," Job evaluation
ward "pradieur ma
from both (he human
aauert and actual openthg ioat
'"Ihe cost acrountant can
labor costs more srruratr
Plant foremen ,
manager« . . , many
dais ,., and the worker
are Interested in job eva
Bruckhart said.
he stated,
/ Contlnuln
tangible achievement of jj)b evalu*
ution Is the presence of healthier
conditions existing In the mindl
of workers whose produe ion eithU
er makes or breaks a cojnpany.
“Progressive industries |\ have
emeni
Hons
K edict
Ip.
pAraenneli
union offl-
hlaaMif i
uatlon"
"An
Apartment,
ring aa a
lia Navy's
Iminlstra*
| 1
t lk and dim- .
1 and alltjes
, Edwards of .
m tarnes, con-
iat »d in I'lits-
it several sta- ,
i|N evaluation, t.
drawing up
the nntlon'a
daring talk?
inloyeeg. Thr
fter a inf or
lite this af
1
FOOD
COLLEGE STATION
Free Delivery
—Delivery Hours—
10 a.m, — 4 p.m.
Mtnmiri y.
Cheese ; |l
Made from whole Milk
For that ohInWo picnic
\
Sugar
Bac
2 to 3
Cook Them on Open Pit
UrlNket
Pot Roast
,
SNOWDRIFT i
I
A Pure Vegetable Shortening ^
wr ■
1
2 No. 2 cans
F . 1 - A
New Windsor
Peas .
Sniders
Catsup
1 LARGE — 1 REGULAR
RINS0
Sweetheart Toilet
29c 1
2 14 xtn. 1 Kittles
Tam
Ubb
Reap
I I
30c
2 No- 2 cans
11 m
Del-Monte
Spinach
SCOTT
Soft Bath Room Paper
Brwwt “O” Chlokm, Fiitojr, Solid Pack
Tuna Toucan*
1m! '
Libby
1/
u
: !
rozen
Honor Hritnd
PKA8 AND UAKKOTN
12 0/. pkg,
\\>
x
. j ' /X ; •
' ! \
• !
• // i \ ! i
IIART’S ORANGE 4ltVCK
Concontrtto / | ,
M oz. can
| ■. -
FAFIO TORTILLAS
W [y- ■
19c
A'
X.
AX.
/X •
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rvice
lx: ' i
A. ■../
/
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/ ' i A \
/ f .(i '
/ J
IJP
/ .'.L/p
O
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f I
Ifxx
7
x;.
2 cans 35c
12-oz cans
19c
r 31c
25c
.2
l iiNo- V/2 can
' 43c
f-i
—
4
ro
A
rigmm* rtf t i-ii'
a a,
Mr
I
fruit
is 21c
A
5c
18c
SldalM
hk
17c
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