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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1952)
Page 4 THE BATTALION Monday, February 18 ,1952 Job Opportunities Interviews Slated This Week Ten major companies will be on the campus this week to interview prospective graduates for positions with their organizations. These in terviews are scheduled today- through Friday. General Motors Corporation will interview graduates in the following fields today and Tues day; mechanical engineering—de sign, development, or testing gas, diesel and aircraft engines, gas turbines, propellers, transmissions, rubber and plastic products, heat ing and ventilating equipment, or household appliances; Electrical engineers — design, development or testing of various types of electrical and electronic equipment such as radios, fraction al horsepower and intragral mot ors, generators; Industrial engineering—training in tool engineering, time and mo tion study, quality control work, process engineering or manufac turing supervision; Chemical engineers—training in research and testing paints, finish es, lubricants, fuels adhesives, metals, plastics, rubber or non productive materials. Openings also available for civil engineers, phy sics and math majors. United Fruit Company Representatives of the United Fruit Company will be on the campus to talk with agricultural and engineering majors interested in work in Central America. They also have opportunities for busi ness majors. Due to housing condi tions, they are interested in single men only at this time. The agricultural duties consist of supervision of farm operations including relations with farm lab or, making payrolls and keeping cost records and production esti mates. The engineering operations consist of topographic surveys, layout and construction, genera tion and distribution of power, in stallation and operation of com munication systems, etc. A general meeting will be held in Room 2-A of the MSC at 8 tonight with individual interviews being held Tuesday. Goodyear The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will interview here today and Tuesday. They are interested in talking with mechanical, chem ical, electrical, aeronautical, indus trial, and civil engineering grad uates for openings in both their rubber plant and aircraft industry. The opportunities which exist cover a broad field and consist of product and process develop ment, research, plant engineering, machine design and production management. The Phillips Petroleum Company will conduct interviews Tuesday and Wednesday and are interested in graduates in the following field’s: mechanical, chemical, elec trical, civil, industrial, and petrol eum engineering. They are also in terested in talking with candi dates for degrees in chemistry and physics. Representatives will be here from their refining department, gasoline department, chemical company, general engineering de partment, and research and devel opment department. A representative of the Gulf Oil Company will be here Wednesday to interview petroleum engineer ing graduates. Napier-Blanchard Wedding Performed By Candlelight Miss Betty Napier and Second Lt. Robert Glenn Blanchard were married in the A&M Methodist Church Saturday afternoon at 4 in a candlelight service. The Rev. James Jackson performed the doub le ring ceremony. The former Miss Napier is the daughter of Col. and Mrs. E. W. Napier of College Station. She attended Southern Methodist Uni versity and the University of Tex as. She is a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. She was grad uated from Thomas Jefferson High School in San Antonio. Lt. Blanchard, a 1951 June grad uate, was a distinguished military student and received a regular commission in the Air Force. While at A&M, he was commander of C Squadron. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis M. Blanchard of Wichita Falls. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a princess style gown of white shantilly lace over satin. The full skirt fonned a full train and the fitted bodice fea tured a sheer yolk with lace medal lions on the neckline. The finger tip length veil of illusion fell from a crownless lace bonnet. Her bou quet was an orchid surrounded by hyacinth florets. Miss Nancy O’Byrne of Dallas BUY, SEIX, RENT OR TRADE. Ratea .... 3c a word per insertion with a 25c minimum. Space rate is classified section .... 60c per column-inch. Send (11 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received in (Undent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the day before publication. • HELP WANTED • MAN to sell Overusing for student mag azine. NoP a great deal of money to be made,'but the experience is invaluable to a J r',"yone who plans to meet the pub- liq.' See Joe Arnett, Battalion office, Coodwin Hall. • FOR SALE • GOOD used 6-foot home freezer. Ninety-day guarantee. Phone 4-9876. ONE 48-INCH roll-away bed with inner- spririg mattress, $30. See after 5 p.m. at 901 Fairview. 1950 G.E. Deluxe washing machine. Re tailed $169.95. Has timing device and pump. Will sell for $90. B-20-A. Col lege View, Tom Goodson. TWO BEDROOM home in College Station. Phone 6-2564. • LOST • BILLFOLD. If found, please mail con tents to Gus Wulfman. Box 5196. • FOUND • WRIST WATCH. Call 6-3679 to identify. • PERSONAL • Durwood: If you shun my love I’ll kill myself. Nancy D. W. H. FINCHER Republic National Life Insurance Co. Room 4, Aggieland Pharmacy Office. Ph 4-8448 —Res. 6-1572 RADIOS <5, REPAIRING , Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP Phone 4-4114 Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th (Across from Court House) Call 2-1662 for Appointment SAFE-T-WAY TAXI Phone 2-1400 • WORK WANTED • GARDEN PLOWING, weed mowing, and yard work by student who has garden tractor. Phone 6-2564. • SPECIAL NOTICE • COMMUNITY MALE CHORUS has sev eral openings in all sections. Per sons interested in good singing and fine fellowship, for information phone F. T. Knapp at 4-9176 or 5-7154 or come to the music hall on the A&M campus at 7:30 p.m. today. Directory of Business Services INSURANCE of all lines. Homer Adams. North Gate. Call 4-1217. Official Notice NOTICE TO VETERINARY MEDICINE SCHOOL APPLICANTS All currently enrolled pre-veterinary medicine students who expect to qualify as applicants for admission into the School of Veterinary Medicine in September, 1952, should file their application in the Reg istrar’s Offic not later than March 1. Forms to be used in making application for admission to the School of Veterinary Medicine are available at the information desk in the Registrar’s Office. H. L. Heaton Registrar CHANGES IN STUDIES Changes in the list of courses for which any student is currently registered may be made only on the written recommendation of th head of each department concerned and with the approval of the dean of the student’s school. A student may not add a course after Saturday, February 9. Any course dropped after Saturday, Febru ary 16, shall normally carry a grade of F. C. Clement French Dean of the College The second installment of fees for the Second Semester is due not later than Feb ruary 20 and may be paid now at the Fiscal Department. The fees for mem bers of the Corps of Cadets are as follows: Board to March 20 $36.95 Room Rent to March 20. . 9.35 Laundry to March 20.... 3.00 Total, Second Installment $ 49.30 For Students who reside in a College dormitory and are not members of the Corps of Cadets', the fees are: Room Rent to March 20..$ 9.35 Laundry to March 20 3.00 Total, Second Installment, $ 12.35 C. A. Roeber Auditor The P. L. Downs Natatorium will be open three nights a week starting next Monday, February IS on Mondays, Wed nesdays, and Thursdays. It will be open to students, their wives and children, fac ulty and their families, and residents of College Station. Students will be admitted free upon presentation of I.D. cards and Student Activities card. Admission for non-stu dents is as follows: Children, 12 years of age and under, 9 cents; Adults, 13 years of age and over, 14 cents. Bathing suits and caps are required Caps may be purchassed at the pool. C. E. Tishler Head, Phys. Ed. Dept. CANDIDATE FOR DEGREES Any student who normally expects to complete all the requirements for a degree by the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s Office NOW and make formal application for a degree. MARCH 1st is the deadline for filing an application for a degree to be conferred at the end of the current semster. This deadline applies to both graduate and un dergraduate students. H. L. Heaton Registrar was maid of hpnor. She wore a gown of pink nylon net over pink taffeta and a half-hat of pink net. She carried a modified colonial bouquet of pink carnations. Waldo Blanchard, Wichita Falls, was his brother’s best man. The ushers were Nolan S. Sonnenberg and Donald S. Burns, Port Arthur, Doyle R. Griffin, Long View, and Lt. Dick Kelley, Bryan Air Force Base. Jimmy Rollins, organist, played the traditional wedding marches and accompanied Lamar McNew who sang “Because” and “T h e Lord’s Prayer”. Reception Held in MSC A reception was held in the MSC following the ceremony. Misses Shirley Fletcher, Norma Lee Baxter, San Antonio; Jan Mc- Kiney, Baytown; Jan Gartman, Dallas; Sonja Gladbach, Groesbeck; Mrs. Howard W. Barlow, Mrs. John P. Abbott, and Miss Ann Hicker- son, College Station, were in the house party. Piano music was played throughout the hour by Miss Deanie Parker, Pickton. The tea table was centered with an epergne with snapdragons, stock, and bells of Ireland cascad ing to the table which was covered with a white nylon cloth. The bride cut the first piece of the three tiered cake with her father’s sabre. Out-of-Town Guests Out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis M. Blanchard, parents of the groom and Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. McCormick, Wichita Falls; Mr. and Mrs. James O. Elliott, grandparents of the bride, Miss Joan Elliott, Miss Eva Mae Jones, Mrs. Jessie M. Fletcher, Mrs. Hur ley Brown, Miss Elaine Suttie, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Jones, San Antonio. The couple will make their home in Panama City, Florida where the groom is stationed at Tyndall Air Force Base. HKB RELAYS GIVEN Two HKB relays have been giv en to the Electrical Engineering Department, Texas A&M College. The gifts are from the Westing- house Electric Corporation. Chain Belt Company The Chain Belt Company, manu facturers of conveying and pro cessing equipment systems, chain belts, and similar products, will conduct interview here Wednes day. They are interested in civil, mechanical, chemical, and indus trial engineering majors for open ings in the fields of design and manufacture, engineering applica tion, and servicing of their pro ducts. They are interested in bus iness majors for sales work. Douglas Aircraft Company will be here Wednesday and Thursday to talk with aeronautical, mechani cal, electrical, and civil engineers. Their present openings are for aerodynamics stress, flutter and vibration analysis, mechanical and structural component design, in stallation design of power plans and electrical equipment, missile guidance and control systems ser vomechanism and flight test. International Machines International Business Machines Corporation will interview Thurs day. They now have openings in sales work for business adminis tration majors and in customer en gineering for mechanical and elec trical engineering graduates. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will be here Thursday to talk with business, economics, and agricultural economics majors in terested in sales work. A general meeting will be held that morn ing at 9 in Room 2-A of the MSC. Carbide and Carbon Chemicals will conduct interviews here Thurs day and Friday and will be inter ested in talking with chemistry, chemical and mechanical engineer ing majors. A general meeting will be held in Room 2-A of the MSC at 5 p. m. Wednesday. Humble Oil and Refining Com pany will be here Friday to inter view graduates in geology, civil, electrical, industrial, chemical, me chanical, and petroleum engineer ing; also advanced degrees in chemistry and physics. A general meeting will be held in the Ballroom of the MSC at 7 p. m. Thursday. All appointments for interviews will be made at the general meeting. LEO! N B. WEISS BOYETT STREET -In Stock- Beautiful Sheen Gabardine All Wool Shade No. 193 Aggie Air Force SHIRTS and SLACKS Tailored to Perfection COME IN TODAY LEO! N B. WEISS Big Money Move C. C. Edge, far left, watches workmen move the ing to new offices in the new Administration Fiscal Department’s safe from the department’s Building, old offices in the System Administration Build- COMPARE FATIMA with any other * KING-SIZE cigarette •V-Hl <r* •<r’ ■C” 1 FATIMA filters the smoke 85 millimeters for your protection. ^ 2 FATIMA’S length cools the smoke Jf ^ ■ W for your protection. 3 FATIMA’S length gives you those extra puffs —21% longer. MB you get an extra-mild and soothing smoke-plus the protection of c,GAR £rJ *> D °»*s r ^ SH TOB/ >CCo s UALITY * Compare Fatima with any other King-Size cigarette. If you’re not convinced Fatima is better, return pack and unsmoked Fatimas by Aug. 1, '52 for money back plus postage. Fatima, Box 37, New York 1, N.Y. Be&flAi®i(lt^W|i|Cigcireth^: Copyright 1952, Liggett & Mvess Tobacco Co.