Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, March 6, 1951 :$ j&j Corps Promotions Announced (Continued from Page 1) signed adjutant, Major William J. Dunlap named intelligence offi cer. T/Sgt. William R. McSpadden appointed Communications Ser geant. Headquarters First Artillery Battalion Major Wallace Hooper, Jr. as signed operations officer, Capt. Eugene W. Tynes named Adju tant, Capt. Lloyd T. McBeth ap pointed supply officer. S/Sgts. Paul D. Moore and Gus C. Merbeth named transportation sergeant and communications sergeant. A Field Artillery First Lieuts. Flavio R. Gonzales and Joe A Braden named platoon leaders. B Field Artillery First Lieut. Michael F. Spencer named athletic officer. C Field Artillery First Lieuts. James J. Cain, Jim mie Stravelemos, and Tie D. Davis named platoon leaders. First Lieut. James A Walker, named tx*oop in formation officer. Headquarters Second Artillery Battalion Major Clyde E. Schultz assigned executive officer, Capt. George B. Coleman named intelligence offi cer and S/Sgt. Don P. Warden named transportation sergeant. B Coast Artillery First Lieut. Robert P. Parke named second-in-command. Headquarters First Air Force Wing Major Louis A. Wood appointed intelligence officer, and Capt. George B. Roberts named wing in formation officer, Headquarters First Air Force Wing Capt. Phil R. Cobb named group information officer. A Squadron First Lieut. Walter B. Little john named flight leader. D Squadron First Lieut. Bruce E. Carruth named second-in-command. First Lieuts. Donald E. Alford and Er nest H. Baumgart named flight leader and athletic officer. mi. BELVEDERE SAYS: “Yes, I Know It’s Great, I Thought of it.” And it is .... the Belvedere Grip-Tite Mixing Bowl This sensational bowl doesn’t slip or slide. You need not hold it when using. It is held firm by a grip - tite base that sets your other hand free. It’s so easy on you and has an ovenware bowl. . . only $3*50 at GRIESSER Electric Co. 212 N. Bryan Southside, College Phone 2-1423 Phone 4-9876 E Squadron First Lieut. Edgar T. Butler, Jr. appointed athletic officer. First Sgt. Stanley L. Perkins named First Sergeant. F Squadron First Lieuts. William B. White, William H. Halery, and Jerry C. Waggoner appointed flight leader, scholastic officer and squadron in formation officer. Headquarters Second Air Force Wing Major LeRoy D. Lockhart named operations officer, Capt. Robert Wimberley named wing informa tion officer, and S/Sgt. Archie Z. Griffin appointed Color Sergeant. Headquarters Third Air Force Group Capt. David G. Robertson named adjutant, Capt. Louis M. Caplan appointed intelligence officer, Capt. Thomas W- McAshan assigned group informations officer. T/Sgt. John H. Storrie and Allen N. Wea ver appointed Sergeant Major and Supply Sergeant. G Squadron First Lieuts. John P. Thomas and Charles T. Peebles named flight leaders. First Lieut. Bob R. Farrow appointed scholastic officer. Headquarters Fourth Air Force Group Capt. David N. Leavitt named group information officer. Headquarters Armor-Engineer Regiment Major Janies W. Porter named adjutant, Major Stanley W. Cogan named supply officer, and S/Sgt. Joe W. Burdett named Color Ser geant. A Armor First Lieut. Dayton B. Blaine appointed athletic officer. B Armor First Lieut. Norman H. Moore assigned as athletic officer. A Engineers First Lieuts. Charles B. Fergu son and Edward L. Arnold appoint ed second-in-command and athletic officer. A Signal Corps First Lieut. Jack W. Jones named second-in-command. A Quartermaster First Lieut. David A. Risenger appointed platoon leader. •Headquarters TC-CC Battalion Capt. Joseph M. Franks assign ed battalion information officer. A Chemical Corps First Lieuts. Fred H. Dunn and Carroll V. SoRelle assigned troop information officer and platoon loader. Headquarters Seventh Regiment jLt. Col. Carlos V. Reyes appoint ed executive officer, Major James R. Stevenson assigned operations officer. Headquarters Veteran Battalion Capt. Robert E. Long named adjutant and T/Sgt. Chester L. Hicks appointed supply sergeant. A Veterans First Lieuts. Fernando Martinez, Robert E. Dowden, Lenwood L. Scholtz appointed second-in-com mand and platoon leaders. Boni face E. Bomba, Jr. named First Sergeant. C Veterans Capt. Victor C. Henkell appoint ed commander, First Lieuts. Perry P. Pyle, Raymond H. Falke, and Billy L. Powell named troop in formation officer, supply officer, and recreation officer. D Veterans First Lieuts. Alfred H, Lock and Wilburn R. Schranke appointed athletic officer and scholastic of ficer. First Lieuts. Charles P. Crosby and Kerry D. Savage nam ed troop information officer and supply officer. Headquarters Athletic Battalion Capts. Winston A. McKenzie and Alfred R. Hardin assigned intel ligence officer and supply officer. B Athletics First Lieuts. Elmo D. Wade, Marvin Martin, Amel Omo assign ed second-in-command, platoon leader, and athletic officer. Headquarters Comoposite Battalion Major Bobby J. Ussery appoint- MAKE US AN OFFER-- HIGH BID BUYS IT THIS WEEK ONLY! 1942 Ford Club Coupe 1940 Ford 2-Door 1939 Ford 2-Door 1936 Ford 2-Door 1942 Plymouth 4-Door 1941 Oldsmobile 4-Door 1937 Oldsmobile 2-Door 1939 Dodge 2-Door 1939 Nash 2-Door 1942 Packard Convertible 1937 Plymouth 4-Door 1937 DeSoto 4-Door 1939 Dodge 4-Door 1939 Oldsmobile 4-Door THESE CARS CAN ALL BE SEEN AT MIT LEE AND COMPANY, Inc. “Your Nash Dealer” 27th and Bryan St. Bryan, Texas ed operations officer. Capts. Ger ald L. Davis and J. L. McFarling assigned battalion information of ficer and supply officer. B Composite First Lieuts. Morris J. Gelber, Morgan D. Kay, and Clyde D. Henderson, Jr. appointed second- in-command, platoon leader and scholastic officer. C Composite Capt. Norman R. Francis as signed commander. First Lieuts. Morris A. Brown and Keith L. Hargrove named second-in-com- mand and platoon leader. First Lieut. Jessee F. Tucker named pla toon leader. Floyd F. Griffin ap pointed first sergeant. Headquarters Senior Battalion Lt. Col. Alvin D. Aaronson as- singed commander. Majors Joe E 1 . Nichols and Harris P. Smith named executive officer and operations of ficer. Capts. Samuel Molinary and Haider T. Jenssen appointed ad jutant and supply officer. A Seniors Capt. Robert L. Giles appointed commander. B Seniors Capt. Emory J. Trees assigned commander’. First Lieuts. Herbert D. Horton and Charles R. Stiefel named platoon leader and troop in formation officer. C Seniors Tom 0. Jordan appointed com mander. E Seniors Capt. K. E. Ramsey named com mander. First Lieuts. D. L. Curry, Marvin W. Engelberg, P. A. David son appointed platoon leaders and administrative officer. Headquarters Eighth Regiment Majors Karl F. Meyers, and Jim Tom House, named intelligence officer, and liaison officer, Majors John Whitmore and Jack E. Mergle appointed regimental information officer and adjutant. M/Sgt. Wil liam B. Witmer appointed supply sergeant. Headquarters First Battalion, Eighth Regiment Capt. Milton H. Bell named ad jutant. S/Sgt. Bruce Miller as signed supply sergeant. Company 1 First Lieut. Thomas M. Fon taine appointed second-in-com mand. Squadron 7 First Lieut. John W. Hudnall as signed second-in-command. Squadron 8 Capt. Frederick P. Henry named commander. Company 11 Capt. Herman 0. Thomson ap pointed commander. Robert F. Langford assigned first sergeant. Flee Trap--- (Continued from Page 2) An hour and 20 minutes later the communists fled, taking their dead and wounded with them. “We know their losses were heavy,” Marchand said. “There was blood all over the place.” Sgt. Otto Lammert of Webster, Wis., said “I had my bayonet ready to do some slicing but I couldn’t move out of that foxhole.” “If it hadn’t been for old Bill thawing out that machinegun we all might have been killed,” he added. “He always was a boy who could come though in a pinch.” m Those Dreary Looking Clothes Enliven them . . . Refresh them.. at AGGIE CLEANERS Bring out the ‘Spring’ in your clothes . . . give them that certain fresh ness of the spring air by bringing them to us for expert cleaning and care. Our expert workmen will please both you and your clothes. Try us once and you will agree. DROP BY TODAY N. Gate Ph. 4-4554 Aggie Players to Present Modern Dress ‘Antigone’ By ALICE BURKS When the Aggie Players pre sent the modem version of “Anti gone” on April 2 and 3, they will be enacting one of the classic Greek tragedies which has proved a favorite through the years. “Antigone” is the last part of a three part story of a doomed fam ily written by that master traged ian, Sophocles, 2,400 years ago. The story begins with “Oedi pus Rex” which reveals that Oedipus, who has been brought up from infancy in a foreign court, has returned as a man to Thebes, killed his own father, Lauis, and married his own moth er. When these two sins are disclos ed, his mother hangs herself, and Oedipus, putting out his own eyes, takes the child Antigone begging with him. The second tragedy, “Oedipus at Colonus”, deals with Oedipus’ death in exile, and the return of Antigone to Thebes, After Oedipus has deposed of his throne, his two sons, Eteoeles and Polynices, agi’eed to share their father’s throne, each to reign over Thebes in alternate years. Eteoeles, having reigned a full year, refused to yield up the throne to his brother. Polynices supported by foreign troops, beseiges Thebes, but is repelled by the Theban army. The broth- Attaches — (Continued from Page 1) During his military service he acted in the capacity of adjutant in a field artillery regiment, as a battery commander, an instructor in gunnery at the School of Ar tillery, and as a member of the Danish delegation to the North At lantic Treaty Organization in Washington. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel on Jan. 1, 1961. Col. Umberto De Martino, who is a Bersaglieri or Italian Light In fantry officer, was born in 1906 and commissioned a 2nd lieutenant in 1924. Upon conclusion of the Italian Armistice in September 1943, Col onel De Martino joined the Par tisans where he distinguished him self in combat. In November of 1944 he became assistant commander of the “Le- ganano” Regiment and later Chief of Staff of the “Folgore” Combat Grou, both of which were Italian units under Allied command. Colonel De Martino wears the Silver Medal for Valor, which is the second highest combat award in the Italian Army. Colonel De Martino is military attache to Canada as well as the United States. A telegram received from Col onel De Martino read as follows; “Bringing with me the unforget table Valentino features and the adventurous spirit of Hopalong Cassidy I will arrive at Texas A&M on Friday night March 9 Stop.” ers kill one another in single combat, and Creon, their uncle, becomes king. Here the story “Antigone” opens. Creon, who was on Etecoles’ side, ordains that Polynices is to be left unburied, while Eteoeles is to be buried with pomp and honors. Antigone rebels against the dese cration of her dead brother and buries him. She is caught and there follows a chain of events which rocks the entire city. When Jean Anouilh wrote and produced this play in Paris in 1943, he symbolized in Antigone all Frenchmen who rejected the German “New Order.” Creon, a persuasive dictator who sets him self above religion and the peo ple, represented the German rule. The patriotic French saw in this play, performed in the pre sence of the German Police, a call to colors and a re-awaking of their basic spiritual indepen dence. Katherine Cornell, liking the play, had it translated into Eng lish by Lewis Galantiere, and the American version appeared on Broadway in 1940. With Miss Cor nell cast as Antigone and Sir Ced ric Hardwicke as Creon, the play received wide acclaim. The words which are put into Antigone’s mouth do not belong entirely to Sophocles, nor to An r ouilh. They might find expression in any language, might belong to any age, to any country. They are the basic truths of de cency, the laws of both Cod and man and the arguments of Creon seem weak against such truths. What’s Cooking AIChE, Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. Lec ture room of the Chemistry Build ing. Soph. Chem. majors are in vited. CAMPUS STUDY CLUB, Tues day, 3 p. m. South Solarium of the YMCA. Dr. J. M. Geppert will speak on better health for every day living. PERMIAN BASIN CLUB, Tuesday, 7 p. m. Lounge of the YMCA. Important plans for the Aggieland picture. SPANISH CLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. A film will be shown, “Span ish Influence on the United States.” WILLIAMS COUNTY CLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Room 105 Aca demic Building. POULTRY SCIENCE CLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Poultry farm. ENGINEER STAFF, Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. Engineer office. Commie Life — (Continued from Page 2) place in the party only for those who in the most holy manner love the Soviet Union (substitute' fol low the party line laid down by Moscow), the Communist party of Bolshevicks and Comrad Stalin.” Purge Goes On Further, the party announced it had thrown out 169,000 party members in a continuing purge since Sept. 1. The fate of the pur- gees was not disclosed. But all this was only the latest of many purges, some of them— maybe most of them—ending in death for one-time loyal commun ists accused of going their own way or plotting against the party. In Italy a number of communists have broken away from the con trol of Moscow and the party line laid down by the Russians, but since the communists aren’t in control there these men still walk the streets. The point is: if you were a com munist living in a communist coun try, how could you ever be sure you wouldn’t get hit with a meat- ax tomorrow? Get In The Game! Aggies, don’t lie around in the sack all the time! Take advantage of that sunshine, or what there is of it. We have in stock all the equipment necessary for you to play tennis. Tennis shorts, especially made for the game, T-shirts or sweat shirts, whichever you prefer. Tennis rackets by Wright-Ditson, and Wil son. These rackets are strung with DuPont nylon, unharmed by moisture, strong and resilient, long lasting, single filament. We also have the Dunlop championship tennis ball, choice of thousands. SEE US FOR YOUR TENNIS EQUIPMENT THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” HILLEL CLUB, Wednesday, 7:15 p. m. Room 2B, MSC. HORTICULTURE SOCIETY, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Agriculture Building. KREAM AND KOW KLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Room 311 Agri culture Building. SADDLE AND SIRLOIN CLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Room 3D, MSC. Town Hall--- (Continued from Page 1) he is Musical Director and Conduc tor of the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, a post to which he was appointed in 1944. Solo Violinist Violinist Julius Hegyi, a native New Yorker, has performed as so loist with Leopold Stokowski and the City Center Symphony of New York. He was a member of this company for three years. He has also played with the NBC and CBS symphony orchestra. Julius Hegyi has presented more than 300 chamber music recitals. He is founder and first violinist of the Hegyi String Quartet. A graduate of the Julliard School of Music, where he was concert master of the symphony orchestra, Hegyi has had the guidance of such outstanding musical figures as Jo seph Szigeti, Fritz Reiner, Sto kowski and the late Jacques Gor don. • FOR SALE • 1940 PLYMOUTH, Special Deluxe Clul) Coupe; radio, heater, sun visor, and new tires. Must sell. B-4-B, College View. • FOR RENT • FOUR-ROOM furnished apartment at East Gate. $4ii.00. Call at Parker’s Antiques, Hwy C, on week-ends only. FURNISHEt) room with adult couple, short distance from Campus. Gentle man preferred. Call :i-3593. • HELP WANTED • WANTED: Boys for summer work. Con tact Dorm 12, Room 111. GIRL SCOUT Executive—qualifications — College Degree—20 hours Social Sciences. Camp Leadership. Phone Mrs. Raymond Rogers, 4-8984. • WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 002 N. Main, Bryan, Texas. • LOST AND FOUND • LOST: ’51 Senior Ring, Notify McAllister, Doim 3-101. of Veterinary Medicine in September, 1051, should file their application In the Reg istrar’s Office not later than April 1. Forms to be used In making application for admission to the School of Veterinary Medicine are available at the information iesk in the Registrar’s Office. II. L. HEATON GRADUATING SENIORS NOTE: Orders are now being taken for Graduation An nouncements at the office of Student, Activities Second Floor. Goodwin Hall. The deadline Is 5 o’clock, March 13. The A. & M. College Laundry Is now in a position to do commercial work for, all College employees. You may bring your luundiy on Monday or Thursday and pick It up In 3 days. All work will be cash and carry.. J. H. Klngcnld Sr. Mgr. A. & M. College Laundry ITS THE * • MISCELLANEOUS • SENIORS—PLACEMENT OFFICE PHO TOGRAPHS. One day service. See Howard, Room 50, Milner Hall. Phone 4-4974. Official Notice NOTICE TO VETERINARY MEDICINE SCHOOL APPLICANTS All currently enrolled pre-veterinary med icine students who expect to qualify as 45 RPM Classic - RECORDS - Popular SHAFFER'S GRILL for Real Taste TREATS '|Vy:.v . k • « . .' • Home Made Chili t Delicious Malts t Bar-B-Q Sandwiches • Friendly Service B <5 B GRILL NORTH GATE I Eugene Rush North Gate Each One Reach One What’s This “Each One Reach One” Business? That means that each and every student ought to be in constant touch with at least one boy in his home town who will be grad uated from high school this spring. Why? A&M NEEDS TOP QUALITY MEN . . . Sure! So What? So this: Tell your friend back home how much you like A&M and Aggieland. Invite him up to visit you every once in a while, and show him a good time while he’s here. Get him ac quainted with the campus and the school. And Then? And then persuade him to enroll in A&M this summer or this fall, when he starts his college career. You want to share it with your home town friends. GET BUSY, and get your friends interested in A&M, NOW! EACH ONE REACH ONE