hemical, ?lcal > indj, d Petroie,, f ’ ^dusttj. c heitiist f s and 3r ’ ai >y i, Conserv'ati 0 educati, ■ in S> a groJ 1 andry Home \ { iltural > agricultj; Itura] eng animal In ndl ’y, horl science, ilman 5 Many g and vahle; iidoes uality ’ their smoke easy- upon xgate souls deter- rnally lether stion: a and miles, date? living lajor- Ellen ehad Santa Schedules Thursday Visit Santa Claus will be at the North Gate in College Station Thursday from 2:15 to 4:15 p.m. The jolly old gent is coming early this year to give local youngsters rides in a 40-foot rocket ship and on ponies. Coupons for the free rides will be distributed by the College Sta tion merchants who donated the money for Santa to come. The A&M Consolidated High School band will play for the occasion, ac cording to J. E. Loupot and Herb Shaffer, coordinators of the proj- and >y he ■tant ezed their ired. istly it of she and the lent, him lave will him uses i by t up -hey rom \nd lest rely the you Jinan :ed in ris for tiula 1 “MY VIEWS OiV BERLIN” Dirioht W. Elsrnhoirvr This week Eisenhower speaks his mind on the Berlin crisis. He tells why the Russians have stepped up the pressure. Whether, in his opinion, they will risk nuclear war. And how each of us can help stave off nuclear war. Read this week’s Saturday Evening Post. The Saturday Evanlnf iH *■» !' Don't Miss Our GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY SALE NOW THRU CHRISTMAS YOU CAN BUY DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY SILVER GIFTS AT DISCOUNTS 25% TO 50%' On Regular Well Known Items • COME • IN • SOON Where You Get © MORE • FOR © YOUR • DOLLARS San key Park Keepsake Jeweler 111 N. Main Bryan TRAVEL Fifteen student leaders in Agriculture were initiated into Alpha Zeta, agriculture honor fraternity, in ceremonies last night. New members are, back row left to right, John Tibbels, Bob Carter, Zay Gil breath, Charles Schwertner, Lin Wilson, Alpha Zeta Initiates the School of James Hill, Robert Redding and James De- Mont. Front row, Dennis McIntosh, TSill Cepica, Ken Stewart, Bobby Quisenberry, Charles Maderer, Charles Curry and Bud Wright. Two Casts Ready For Play At Consolidated High School Two different casts will take to the stage for the A&M Consoli dated Senior Class play, “My Three Angels,” to be presented Thursday and Friday. Each of the two performances of the three act comedy is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. in the A&M Consolidated High School auditorium. Set in Cayenne in 1910, the comedy tells of three convicts, per mitted because of good behavior, to go ashore from Devil’s Island. SCONA (Continued From Page 1) The uniform is Class “A” with helmit liners and white gloves. Friday night, Dec. 8, a second panel consisting of four congress men will discuss “Liberal and Con servative Government.” Members of the panel are Olin E. Teague, B. F. Sisk, J. B. Dorn and Thomas B. Curtis. Roundup speaker for the con ference is William S. White, noted Washington correspondent and New York journalist. W T hite will arrive by plane accompanied by Felix McKnight, executive manag ing editor of the Dallas Times-Her- ald Friday morning. All plenary session keynote speakers are jointly presented each year by the Student Conference on National Affairs and the Great Issues Committee. They are woi’king there when they decide to help the Ducotel family, suffering from financial troubles, and the daughter, Mary Louise, whose romance life is “on the rocks.” This is their Christmas gift to the Ducotels. The student costume committee received special praise from Di rector Frank Coulter. The com mittee, headed by Janet Durst, re searched costumes for this period play, made sketches and gathered hundreds of material samples. They also adapted the men’s costumes and did all the sewing. Other committee members include Linda Rist, Vicki Kemmer and Judy Mills. Roles have almost been com pletely double cast for the two performances. Nancy Beamer and Melanie Clark portray Marie Lou ise. Convict Joseph is played by Charles Roeber and Larry Ran dolph. Jules is to be Jody Rush and Tommy Taylor. Alfred will be Russell Welch and Furman Is bell. Felix is played by Richard Pow ell and Bobby Medlin, and Emilie, his wife, will be acted by Ruth Mc- Niel and Marcy Goode. Marcia Chalk and Louise Robinson are cast as Madame Parole. Henry, the only solo cast, will be played by David Bailey. Paul, his nephew, is portrayed by Allan Mervish and Leslie Brusse. Lieutenants are Cyril Burke and J. E. Robbins. INTERVIEWS for: Sales and Sales Management Training Program This Program is designed to develop young men for careers in life insurance • sales and sales man agement. It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 3 weeks at a Home Office School) before the men move into full sales work. Those trainees who are interested in and who are found qualified for management responsibility are assured of ample opportunity to move on to such work in either our field offices or in the Home Office after an initial period in sales. The Connecticut Mutual is a 115-year-old com pany with 520,000 policyholder-members and five billion dollars of life insurance in force. Ag gressive expansion plans provide unusual oppor tunities for the limited number of men accepted each year. / Arrange with the placement office for an inter view with: Mr. Warren C. Smith Interviews Scheduled Thursday, December 7 Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY • HARTfORU Coulter, in directing the play, said: “Even after the weeks of re hearsal, the cast is still discover ing new meaning in their lines.” Tickets for the play will be 60 cents for adults and 40 cents for students if bought in advance and 75 cents for adults and 50 cents for students if bought at the door. Pre-school age children will be ad mitted free. (Continued From Page I) ers all they way back to Washing ton, D.C. because of a lack of available seats on regularly sched uled airlines. An example of such circum stance occurred during SCONA III in 1956 when Senator Hubert Humphrey agreed to speak at the conference, said Spencer. An nouncements of his plans to speak at the conference were printed and circulated along with the regular SCONA program for that year. Then, the senator discovered a previous agreement to speak in Minnesota which was scheduled very close to the A&M conference. His flight schedule didn’t allow enough time to reach College Sta tion in time for the SCONA con ference. The SCONA III transportation committee promptly went out on a limb and offered to provide a plane for the senator which it did not have. Humphrey agreed on the condition that the students also provide transportation back to Washington on the same day that he arrived. The senator was flown down on a twin-engine plane rented in Washington, D.C. One engine failed during the trip, leaving the plane useless for carrying a full load on the return. It became virtually impossible, due to weather conditions and ar rangement difficulties for the com mittee to comply with its promise to return the senator to Washing ton as earlier agreed. However, through the last-min ute assistance of an alumnus in Dallas who conveniently had sway with an airline arrangements were made for the senator’s passage back to Washington, and the com mittee complied with its promise. This was just one of many simi lar situations handled through split-second arrangements by the SCONA transportation committee in past years. The New York City Health De partment has estimated that in one year alone the city saved nearly $20 million in patient care plus an unestimated amount in hospital construction thanks to effective new drugs for the treat ment of tuberculosis. THE EATTADDR Tuesday, December 5, 1961 College Station, Texas Page 3 Presbyterian Professor To Be Speaker At Chapel Tomorrow Dr. Dietrich Ritschl, professor of historical theology at the Aus tin Presbyterian Theological Sem inary, will be guest speaker to morrow in a program presented by the All Faiths Chapel. His topic, to be heard at 7:30 p.m., will be “A Religious Atti tude Toward Changing Political Philosophies.” Ritschl is a native of Switzer land. He attended college at Tue- binger and Basel and received his doctorate in 1957 at the University of Bern. He served pastorates in Zyfer, Switzerland, from 1950-52 and was minister of German speaking congregations in Scot land, 1952-58. In 1957 he was guest lecturer at Presbyterian College, Montreal, Canada. He has held various teaching positions in Basel, Swit zerland; and at New Colleg-e, Edin burgh, Scotland, and was special lecturer in Budapest and Debre cen, Hungary. AIRLINES (Continued from Page 1) 3. From Houston to Texarkana, Tex., by way of Conroe, Hunts ville, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, Pales tine, Tyler and Longview, Tex., Shreveport, La., and Texarkana, returning by way of Paris, Sher man, Denton, Dallas, Fort Worth, Abilene, Brownwood, Waco, Tem ple and Bryan. ii 3M I \ Ld Birehcraft.. adds more “living” room to every room! Exciting Birehcraft Custom Room Plan furniture by Baum- xitter adds spacious luxury at modest cost! Birehcraft pro vides worlds of storage—makes rooms look larger, more beautiful. Perfect for every room, open stock Birehcraft Custom Room Plan Jets you custom tailor your home to your needs. Delight fully easy to plan with, too. Hand-rubbed beige butternut or brown chestnut finishes on birch and rock maple. KRAFT FURNITURE CO. 218 S. Main Bryan 1960-1961 DIRECTORIES of OFFICES - STAFF - STUDENTS TEXAS A&M COLLEGE AVAILABLE Student Publications Office YMCA Bldg, $1.00 Per Copy Plus 2% Sales Tax