The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 03, 1951, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, July 3, 1951
Allen Accepts Position
With Consolidated- Vultee
Professor 0. F. Allen of the
A&M English Department has ac
cepted a position with Consolidat-
ed-Vultee Aircraft Corporation of
Port Worth, according to an an
nouncement from the' English De
partment.
Allen, who has spent a total of
five and one-half years in the
English Department here, came to
A&M in 1942 as a Professor of
.Rural Sociology, and taught until
1943 in that capacity. He spent
one year in research work and a
total of two years with the U.S.O.
He will assume the duties of his
new position in the technical writ
ing section of the Engineering De
partment of the corporation on
July 15.
Scouts Meet Wednesday
At American Legion Hall
Troop 411 of the Boy Scouts of
America will meet Wednesday,
July 4, at 7:30 in the American
Legion Hall, the troop leader an
nounced today.
RADIOS <& REPAIRING
Call For and Delivery
STUDENT CO-OP
0. F. Allen
Accepts. New Position
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
203 S. Main Street
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
BIG VALUE!
DCIUXC l
SHAVING BOWL SIT
Town Shoving Bowl... mold
ed out of lustrous plastic with
lock closure top; hundreds of/
smooth shades.
Town After-Shave Lotion...
supplies a bracing tingle; fresh
as a May morning.
Town Tolc . . . matches and
blends with skin tones; keeps
shaves alive hours longer..
.■y- Only ($2.50
JaUHl Toiletries for Men
The Exchange Store
‘‘Serving Texas Aggies”
Board Praises
Boatner on Job
Well Done
(Continued from Page 1)
A&M Development Fund Commit
tee.
A special commendation was
voiced by the board for the fine
job done by Col. Hayden L. Boat
ner while PMS&T and Comman
dant at A&M.
Revised budgets for the 1950-51
session, new budgets for Summer
schools and budgets for the 1951-
52 session were approved for all
parts of the System.
Thomas James Tinker was ap
pointed athletic director at Ar
lington State College to replace
James (Klepto) Holmes who re
cently accepted the position as
freshman coach at A&M.
Accepts Scholarship
The hoard accepted scholarships
and fellowships totaling $14,800
which had been offered to the
system since April. Awards were
received from the following: M. N.
Pipe Company, Abilene A&M Moth
ers and Central West Texas A&M
Clubs, W. A. Green Jr.
Fort Worth A&M Mother’s Club,
San Antonio A&M Mother’s Club,
W. P. and Bulah Fuse Foundation,
Sears, Roebuck and Company, So-
cony-Vacuum Oil Company and
Magnolia Petroleum Company, Tom
J. Wolfe.
Harry C. Davis, Student Campus
Chest, Gulf States Telephone Com
pany and M. T. Halbouty.
The board’s next meeting was
set for Friday and Saturday, Oct.
5 and 6.
Girl Scouts at Camp
Staff Promotions
Smith Coes
(Continued from Page 3)
as regular line smashes that
Smith’s name was a byword at the
Monday morning quarterback club
meetings around the country.
To proVe to the unbelievers in
the East, Bob took the opening
kickoff against Georgia and moved
an even 100 yards down the grid
iron to put the Aggies in the lead
with only 17 seconds of the game
elapsed and the Bulldogs never
did recover from the glow. That
wasn’t all he did as he amassed
a total of 323 yards that Decem
ber day. Look for Smith this Fall
as he will be running about 10 op
ponents ragged with his antics with
a football. And look for Smith to
make all the all-America teams this
year, not just a few choice ones.
THE BIGGEST “PLUS” IN CIGARETTE HISTORY
“NO UNPLEASANT
$ !•
AFTER-TASTE”
1111
mh
-added to the
worlds most
famous ABCs
^e//er
IV
K
St #
pooler
tasting
smoking
“ : 7v''
lii!
'11':
mm
>
* ■
Chesterfield is the only cigarette
of all brands tested in which
members of our taste panel
found no unpleasant after-taste/ 7
From the report of a well-known research organization
Always Buy
Chesterfield
Copyright 1951, Liggett & MvEKi Tobacco Co.
(Continued from Page 1)
structors to. assistant professors;
C. M. Simmang, associate profes
sor to professor; Petroleum Engi
neering, Joe A. Laind, assistant
professor to associate professor.
Veterinary Medicine
Veterinary Anatomy, A. A. Price
and L. W. Gibbs, instructors to as
sistant professors; Veterinary Med
icine and Surgery, W. V. Lumb,
assistant professor to associate
professor; J. C. Swaim, instructor
to assistant professor. Veterinary
Pathology, D. F. Johnson, instruct
or to assistant professor; Wm. S.
Monlux, associate professor to
professor.
Staff Promotions
Library, A. J. Houze, acting li
brarian to librarian.
Physical plants, Howard Badgett,
Wykes, associate professor to pro
assistant manager of System to
manager of A&M College.
Athletic Department, Raymond
George, assistant football coach
to head football coach, effective
May 1, 1951.
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station, Biochemistry and Nutri
tion, Cornelia B. Wilson, steno
grapher to department secretary;
Feed Control Service, Rosalina B.
Koontz, stenographer to stenogra
pher-clerk.
State chemist, Sophie M. Mc-
Callum, stenographer to depart
ment secretary; Natalie B. Nich
ols, technical assistant in Agron-
o m y Department to technician
state chemist department; Joyce
B. Stewart, clerk in Agronomy De
partment to stenographer in state
chemist department.
The flag is lowered at a ceremony at Girl Scout
Camp held at Camp Arrowmoon, near Hearne.
Miss Mary Ann Norman, art councilor, is lower
ing the flag while Miss Cynthia Delaplane and
Miss Martha Montgomery, assistant unit leader,
wait to fold it.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. in MSC
Ferrar, Robeson Will Lead
Cast for Shakespeare Play
Academy Award winner Jose
Ferrar and famous Negro singer
Paul Robeson will lead the cast
in a recorded presentation of
Shakespeare's ’’Othello” in the
MSC Assembly Room, Thursday at
7:30 p. m.
The program is being arranged
by students in English 212, cur
rently studying the plays of
Shakespeare. It will include ade
quate interpretation of the play
and of Elizabeth drama in general
to aid persons who might not be
acquainted with “Othello” or
Shakespeare’s plays.
First Presentation
The recorded presentation will
be the first undertaking of its kind
to be offered for the general public
on the campus. It was begun as a
class project in the belief that
several students and local resi
dents would welcome the chance to
hear a Shapespearean play pre
sented by known artists.
Paul Robeson plays the title
role in this Columbia Masterworks
version of the famous tragedy.
Jose Ferrar is cast as lago, Othel
lo’s villainous ensign. Ferrar won
this year’s Academy Award for
his performance in the title role
of the motion picture “Cyrano de
Bergerac.”
Ferrar’s wife, Uta Hagen, plays
the part of Desdemona, Venician
lady who weds Othello against
the advice of her parents. Both
she and Ferrar have studied voice
professionally and appear in occas
ional operatic performances.
“Othello” has been called by hatred of Othello. The most appar-
some critics Shakespeare’s great
est triumph as a stage play. It’s
most notable features, according
to one Shapespearean authority, is
its concentration and design. An
other authority alludes to its
“structural unity and intensity
which makes it... the most admir
ably ordered of all his (Shakes-
pear) tragedies.”
The plot concerns the destruc
tion of Othello, the Moor of Ven
ice, by lago, his trusted officer.
A professional soldier, Othello falls
in love with Desdemona, the beau
tiful daughter of Brabantio, a sen
ator of Venice. The daughter, a
devoted but innocent wife, is used
by lago as a means for destroy
ing Othello bit by bit.
Authorities differ as to what
prompts lago to his consuming
ent reason is malice at being passed
over in a promotion. In making ap
pointments, Othello promotes Cas-
sio as his lieutenant and second-in-
command. lago, who had expected
the post is made ensign or t>ird-
in-command.
To accomplish his end, the evil
lago cunningly uses the forces of
; good to destroy Othello. This good
' eventually destroys lago, too.
No charge will be made for the
program which should be about an
hour and a. half in length.
Red Sox
(Continued from Page 3)
collected singles for the Sox.
Campise, batting champion of the
first half, collected the only hit
for the Tigers.
The Tigers left five men strand
ed on base while the Red Sox had
six men left on. The Sox didn’t
make a bobble in the field but the
Tigers made six.
This was the third straight win
for the Red Sox who lead the
league in the second half.
Tigers 000 0— 016
Red Sox 850 6—19 7 0
USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
BUY, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
, ... 3c a word per Insertion with a
?6c minimum. Space rate in classified
lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send
111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received in Stu-
ient Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• HOME REPAIR •
ALL TYPES home repair work—additions,
ainting, concrete work,
roofing, siding,
and redecorating,
and 30 months ti
mates call 4-9589
v. LV. TV IV.,
Low down payment
o pay. For free estl-
4-4236.
HELP WANTED
Lady to work in Food Department of
Memorial Student Center at College.
Age 25 to 45. Must be capable of
learning supervisory work on the job.
Own transportation essential. Exper
ience in food supervision desirable but
ply in person to
Management
Office or phone 4-1227.
id supei
not essential. Appi
Mrs. Nowlin Jn Center
HELP WANTED
Dinner cook. Must have had at least
two years experience as a second cook.
Must know quantity cookery. Only
qualified applicants accepted. Phone
6-2901 or come to Management Office
of Memorial Student Center.
EXPERT WATCH, JEWELRY,
and
OPTICAL REPAIR
CALDWELL’S
JEWELRY STORE
112 N. Main, Bryan Ph. 2-2435
• FOR SALE •
STUDIO HOUSE—11 /8 acres in Lakeview
Acres. Full bath, kitchen, bed nook,
living room. Built-in table and ironing
board. Furnished or unfurnished.
Luscombe, Box 2655
• WANTED TO BUY •
USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s —
women’s — and children’s. Curtains,
spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602
N. Main. Bryan. Texas.
• WANTED TO RENT •
THREE BEDROOM house or apartment in
College Station, furnished o
furnished. Call 4-4183 before
College
furnish
or after 4 p.m.
!• P
12
artly
noon
• WANTED •
TYPING—twenty cents per page.
3-1776 after 5.
• MISCELLANEOUS •
SUL ROSS LODGE No. 13 JO A. F. & A. M.
Called meeting Tuesday,
July 3 at 7 p.m. Installa
tion of officers.
B. R. Wright, W.M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec.
FREE termite inspection and estimate.
International Exterminators Corporation
Power spraying for flies, mosquitoes, and
other pests. Phone 2-1937.
Official Notice
NOTICE TO AGRICULTURAL STUDENTS
The Extension Service has announced
that, in the future, all prospective county
agents will be required to have credit
for Ag.Ed. 441 and Psychology 301 or
303. Students who plan to seek employ-
ad-
wo
Stt
ment with the Extension Service on gra
uation should plan to include these t’
courses in their program.
Chas. N. Shepardson
Dean of Agriculture
CLEAN UP! PAINT UP!
Everything you need for a redecorating job. Ex
clusive dealership for SPEED Satin (for walls and
wood trim) & BENJAMIN MOORE paint products.
BIRGE, NANCY WARREN, ENGLISH & CANA
DIAN IMPORTS IN THE MOST COLORFUL WALL
PAPER in decades.
Chapman’s Paint & Wallpaper Co.
Bryan “Next to the Postoffice” Dial 2-1318
FREE DINNER
Watch for Your
Name in This Space.
Harold B.
Holcomb
Each Week, The . . I Colle £ e station
12th MAN INN
Will give away a free dinner to the person
whose name appears.
• WATCH FOR YOUR NAME •
Bring This By - - - - It’s Yours Free
TELEPHONES
Colonial Aiherica relied on men riding
in darkness to rally the nation to its own
defense. Those who rode “to spread the
alarm” provided our country’s emergency
communication — and a spectacular page in
our history.
An equally vital service is provided by
the Telephone Company in times of national
emergency. Telephone wires are the cords
that bind our nation together... the messages
that flow through them are the vital heart
beats of the country.
When national defense increases the
tempo of these messages. . . when the Tele
phone Company — telephone people and
telephone equipment — are called on to
provide an even greater service, it is com
forting to know this vital channel of
communication can be quickly made ready
to meet whatever emergencies arise.
Serving Texas,Arkansas,Oklahoma,louitiano