The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1967 Page: 3 of 10
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Oct. 20.1967
THE REDB1RD
Page 3
Col. M. S. Schwartz
He who cannot discuss a dif- Do one
ference—fights. _least—try.
thing perfectly. At He who would honor mankind
must start with himself.
’COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.
Explains Draft Laws
EDITOR'S NOTE: Below are
questions now being asked at
draft boards. The answers are
by Col. Morris S. Schwartz,
state selective service director.
Q—I received my bachelor’s
degree in June. I have been
accepted for graduate study in
history in September. Will I
qualify for H-S deferment?
A--This depends on your draft
board’s decision. If it defers
you, the new regulations permit
it to do so for one year only.
Q--I have completed three
years of college and have earned
75 per cent of the units required
for my degree, but my class
standing is very low. Can
I be deferred for my senior
year?
A—Yes. You must be classi-
fied in II-S (college student)
if you are full time and satis-
factory. Class standing doesn’t
matter any more.
Q—I’ve heard that the defer-
ment of graduate students in
medicine, dentistry, veterinary
medicine, osteopathy, and opto-
metry is now mandatory. Is that
right?
A—Yes, if the student is
satisfactory in his studies.
Q—Who decides he is satis-
factory?
A—The school in which he
is enrolled.
q—Who gets classified in
Class I-Y?
A—A man who takes the
Armed Forces physical and men-
tal examination and is not found
qualified for service, but could
be later if Congress declared
war or national emergency.
Pledges Named
By Honor Society
Kappa Omicron Phi, national'
home economics honor society,
has announced the pledges for
the fall semester.
The seven pledges are Carolyn
Bean, Patricia Clayton Deckert,
Naomi Henson, Doris Hunter,
Hattie Jo Hill, Doreta D. Keith,
and Mary Jane Lormand.
Qualifications listed for mem-
bership are: student must be
a sophomore, have a 1.9 average
in out-of-the-department sub-
jects and a 2.0 average in
home economics, be a member
of the Home Economics Club.
CONTACT
by MUR[NE
EXCLUSIVE!
Free removable carrying
case! Provides hygienic,
convenient care
for your
lenses.
Who’s
got the
ball?
#:>/
One solution for
complete lens care
Lensine’s special properties
assure a smoother, non-irritating
lens surface when inserting your
"contacts.” Just a drop or two
will do it. When used for cleaning,
a unique Lensine formula helps
retard buildup of contaminants
and foreign deposits on the
lenses. It's self-sterilizing and
antiseptic. Ideal for wet storage
or "soaking" of lenses. Lensine
reduces harmful bacteria con-
tamination.
• • •
FREE CARRYING CASE. Exclusive
removable carrying case with
every bottle of Lensine. The
scientific—and convenient—way
to protect your contacts.
LENSINE from
The Murine Company, Inc.
• ..eye care specialist for 70 years
Who cares! Who’s got the Coke? Coca-Cola has the
refreshing taste you never get tired of. That's why things go
better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke.
Bottlod under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company byt
Beaumont Coca-Cola Bottling Company
Beaumont, Texas
will a job with
LTV Aerospace
make you more exciting,
sought after,
healthy, wealthy
and wise?
Why shouldn’t you enjoy the good things of
life when you’re out to conquer the universe?
Sound far fetched? It’s not. □ Your first job
with LTV Aerospace sets you on a path that
can lead you almost anywhere you want to go.
□ LTV Aerospace Corporation makes products, of
course. □ The A-7 — F-8 — Gama Goat — MACV —
Lance—Sea Lance—Scout—prime subcontract stfuc-
turals for the 747 and the SST. That’s a few. Design,
development and production require systems engi-
^ neering with enormously diversified capabilities. □
1 At LTV Aerospace those capabilities are being ex-
amined in terms of the total environmental picture
— sea, land, air, space and outer space — in ocean
sciences — high mobility ground vehicles — mis-
sile systems — military and commercial aircraft,
V/STOL — launch vehicles — extra vehicular
activity research and development. These are
today’s spheres of action at LTV Aerospace.
They are the frontiers of tomorrow. □ A rep-
resentative of LTV Aerospace Corporation
will visit your campus soon. Talk to him.
Talk specifics about programs, assignments,
duties, salaries. Then, talk futures. Ask
questions about where your first job can
take you. □ He’ll have answers for you,
and they won’t be vague generalities.
He’ll show you where LTV Aerospace
Corporation is heading in the total en-
vironmental adventure, and how you fit in.
□ You could find yourself getting pretty
excited about it. And that’s a darned good
way to feel about your first job.
College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace
Corporation, P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas
75222. An equal opportunity employer.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
October 24,1967
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Goode, Charles. The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1967, newspaper, October 20, 1967; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth499173/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed May 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.