THE BATTALION Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 1, 1967 Veterinary College Professor Gets Legion Of Merit Award actor to critical load status, and Dr. Dan Hightower of the Col lege of Veterinary Medicine has been awarded the Legion of Merit, the U. S. Army’s highest award for non-combat service. Hightower, a retired lieutenant colonel, received the award recent ly in ceremonies at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D. C. Colonel Hightower was cited for his innovations in fuel loading, bringing the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research nuclear re- for anticipation of research re quirements while serving as nu clear reactor section chief in the institute’s biophysics division from July 1961 to October 1966. The DVM has been associate professor of veterinary physio logy and pharmacology in Texas A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine since October. His DVM is from Texas A&M. FRANK H. CHEANEY 1952 Graduate Now Lt. Col. With ALCOM Frank H. Cheaney Jr., 36, of Killeen, has been promoted to the grade of lieutenant colonel in the United States Army. Colonel Cheaney is serving with the Alaskan Command as assist ant chief of the Joint Petroleum Office. His office is responsible for supplying petroleum products to all military units in Alaska. The son of Major (USA Ret.) and Mrs. F. H. Cleaney of 1104 Nolan Avenue in Killeen, Colonel Cheaney graduated from Bolton High School, Alexandria, Louisi ana in 1947. He was given a reg ular commission in the United States Army in June 1952 through the Reserve Officers Training Corps program at Texas A&M, upon being selected as a distin guished graduate. He is married to the former Miss Ruby L. Hart, daughter of Mrs. R. R. Hart of Collinsville, Texas. The Cheaneys have a daughter, Carol, 7, who resides with them on Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska. Bockholt Named Conference Head Dr. Anton Bockholt of the Soil and Crop Sciences Department has been named chairman of the Southern Corn Improvement Con ference. He was appointed during this year’s recent meeting at Little Rock, Ark. As chairman, Bockholt will or ganize the 1968 conference set for Feb. 13-14 at A&M Univer sity. The annual conference brings together corn improvement re searchers in 13 southern states. S COLOR loupots North Gate Examining produce in an open-air marketplace in Lisbon is one way to broaden one’s knowl edge of the ways of the Portuguese people. These girls found exploring the markets of cities around the world a relaxing change from studies undertaken during a semester at sea on Chapman College’s floating campus—now called World Campus Afloat. Alzada Knickerbocker of Knoxville,Tennessee,—in the plaid dress —returned from the study- travel semester to complete her senior year in English at Radcliffe College. Jan Knippers of Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, a graduate of the University of Tennessee, and a former Peace Corps Volunteer, first pursued graduate studies in International Relations and re turned a second semester as a teaching assistant in Spanish on the world-circling campus. Students live and attend regular classes aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, owned by the ECL Shipping Co. of Bremen for which the Holland-America Line acts as general passenger agent. In-port activi ties are arranged to supplement courses taught aboard ship. As you read this, the spring semester voyage of discovery is carrying 450 undergraduate and graduate students through the Panama Canal to call at ports in Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, Spain. Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark and Great Britain, returning to New York May 25. Next fall World Campus Afloat —Chapman College will take another 500 students around the world from New York to Los Angeles and in the spring, a new student body will journey from Los Angeles to ports on both west and east coasts of South America, in western and northern Europe and as far east as Leningrad before returning to New York. For a catalog describing how you can include a semester aboard the RYNDAM in your educa tional plans, fill in the information below and mail. Ag Ed Major Has Hollywood Hopes SIGN OF SPRING |A| Shoeless coed takes advantage of warm weather to spend time studying- on grass in front of Acadmi^j Building. M —w A&M To Receive Fellowship^ From HEW Education Office* Sandy-haired Paul Bleau is a senior agricultural education ma jor, but his first love is the theater. The aspiring actor wants to be in the movies. He hopes to land a tryout in Hollywood, possibly this summer or fall. Bleau, whose home is in Lynn, Mass., has been busier than a one- armed paper hanger this spring term acting in two plays, casting for two more, and preparing a brochure to forward to Hollywood film companies. If versatility is a major con sideration of the movie colony, Bleau should be inked to a con tract in short order. He has been leading a triple life in recent weeks, and couldn’t be happier. FIRST OF ALL, Bleau signed on to portray Jerry, a down and out character who could not form relationships with human beings or animals in “The Zoo Story,” by Edward Albee. He memorized 30 pages of lines for the two- character one-act play. While winding up four per formances of “Zoo Story”, Bleau decided he had enough spare time to shoot for a part in “The Night of January 16”, a three-act play by Ann Rand. LANDING THE part of Larry Reagan, a gangster-lover-murder defendant in the Stage Center production, Bleau soaked up 1.1 pages of lines for six perform ances in the district courtroom of the Brazos County Court House in Bryan. For the next two weeks Bleau spent at least six hours a day either rehearsing for one play or acting for keeps in another. Classes posed no problem for Bleau since he is enrolled in three theater-related courses. His only other subject this term is fencing, a one-hour physical education course. It could come in handy if he wants to try out for the swashbuckling role of an Errol Flynn. THE 26-YEAR old Texas trans plant claims the feat of playing different roles in two plays at the same time calls for no special drum beating. “It’s not a difficult problem at all,” Bleau confided. “You learn the lines and the characters. I didn’t get my lines confused at all.” “Being able to play several roles at one time is something that becomes easier with experi ence,” he continued. “I once por trayed three characters in a sin gle play. And I had a lot of fun with the challenge.” THE STOCKY thespian wasted little time between rehearsals and actual presentations. In his spare time, Bleau turned director to handle casting for two plays to be staged in Guion Hall’s Fallout Theater in the spring. “It took me about an hour to take care of casting for ‘A Sleep of Prisoners’ by Christopher Fry and ‘Fam and Yam’ by Edward Albee,” Bleau explained. “I knew just what I wanted.” Before he can pursue his role of director full-time, Bleau has to go to court three more times, on March 2-3-4, to complete “The Night of January 16.” Idaho Magazine Has A&M Article Dr. Michael P. Malone, assist ant professor of history, is au thor of the lead article in an Ida ho Historical Society journal. The article, “C. Ben Ross: Ida ho’s Cowboy Governor,” is fea tured in the Winter, 1966-67 issue of “Idaho Yesterdays,” a quarter ly journal of IHS. It is a study of the political career of the first native Idahoan to be elected gov ernor. Texas A&M is the recipient of ten prospective teacher fellow ships from the Health, Education and Welfare Department of the United States Office of Educa tion. Dr. Wayne C. Hall, A&M’s aca demic vice president, said students seeking master’s degrees in sci ence or history are eligible for fellowships. Fellowships are awarded for a minimum of one year and a max imum of two years, Hall revealed. Stipends are $2,000 for the: year and $2,200 for the year. Allowances are avtMT. for dependents. IF*" The awards are designetiBil strengthen graduate teacheri. paration programs and toM' persons planning careers mentary and secondary edueffi Application forms soon wi available at the Graduate Col Hall noted. No filing deal has been announced. The fellowships begin witt 1 1967 fall term. < NEW LONG DISTANCE SERVICE I Charge right in >n: RB “] loo l ello . . . in the Memorial Student Center and in other locations on the A&M Campus. 1. Lift the receiver (no coins to fool with or dials to spin). 2. Give the Operator the Area Code and the called telephone number. ] •Sem ■sen •edit ibl e! ai n How fc. 3. Tell her if it is a Credit Card call. Collect call, or if it is to be billed to another number. , 1 °Uh fehc °U S A new Mrvice from . . . mmmmu states telephone co.W * QMif *****tiy& C*mp*mie s ^ S.