The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1962 Page: 3 of 6
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Tuesday, March 6, 1962
o
THE
RAMBLER
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Page Three
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Religion Major Plans
Career As CE Director
by Jane Rudolph his Master of Religious Education
Rambler Society Editor degree.
The first person you will prob- Willett's interests are not limited
ably see as you walk in the door of to religious work. His hobbies in-
the MSM Center, regardless of the dude reading plays and attending lestial Bar where Linda
FLOWER DRUM SONG
(Continued from Page 1)
At a garden party celebrating
Madame Liang's citizenship, Wang
Ta announces his engagement to
Linda. His father is embarrassed
and Mei Li is deeply hurt. Sammy
Fong shows up and it develops that
Linda is the girl wjth whom he is
in love.
He invitesPtbe Wangs to the Ce-
CHARLES WILLETT, AN ACTIVE FRESHMAN religion major,
scans magazines in the MSM Center. He is presently serving
as Freshman Representative and Publicity Chairman of MSM.
Hoftiiri In
by
DAVID ERSKiNE
time of day, will be Charles Willett.
This energetic 19-year-old fresh-
man religion major is an active
member of MSM and is Freshman
Representative and Publicity Chair-
man. He is also the MSM Repre-
sentative to the Religious Life
Council and Religious Life Repre-
sentative to the Religious Life
Committee.
His interest in church work be-
gan in high school where he served
as president of the Methodist
Youth Fellowship at Saint Luke's
Methodist Church in Dallas for
three years. He was also a sub-
district officer for two years, serv-
ing as witness chairman and later
as citizenship chairman.
For the past two summers Wil-
lett has been a counselor at the
North Texas State Methodist Camp
in Bridgeport, working with juiv
, ior hi^h and high school youth.
"This experience , has partially
led me to decide on my future
plans." states Willett, "which is to
be a Christian Education director.
I want to work with all ages and
groups of people in the church, but
I am particularly interested in
working with the youth."
After graduation from TWC,
musical and theatrical shows.
1 Also an active student at North
Dallas High School, Willett was
on the Student Council, a member
of the Key Club and Quill and
and Scroll and business manager
and military editor of the school's
newspaper.
Plans for this summer •• include
working on his minister's license
and working in the Dallas Public
Library.
Asked why he chose TWC, Wil- ^
lett implied, "For the past two sum- Sammy Fong to his marriage con-
mers I attended the Campus Insti- tract.
is em-
ployed as a singer. He knows the
results will cause cancellation of
Wang Ta's wedding. Linda is un-
aware of Sammy's plan, tells her
seamstress, HelertJChoa, Mrs. Olyve
Abbott, she is quitting her job to
marry Wang Ta. Helen, silently in
love with Wang Ta for many years,
is heartbroken.
Wang Ta briefly turns to Helen
for comfort, and Mei Li and her
father, played by Bob Price, leave
the Wang house determined to hold
tute sponsored by the North Texas
Conference on this campus. The
student body and faculty seemed
so friendly that I decided this was
the school for me. I am not dis-
appointed either, for I really love
TWC. In fact, I have talked several
of my fri'ends into coming here
next year;"
7th Regional TEPS
Attended By Group
Mrs. Mary Craig, assistant pro-
fessor of education, represented
TWC and the local Student Educa-
tion Association Chapter at a re-
Willett plans to attend Perkins1 g^onal Teacher Education and Pr%-
School of Theology at Southern fession Standards conference h'kd o
Methodist University and work onin Oklahoma Citv on Feb. 2-3.
Through a decree by the Three
Family Association, Sammy is
about to marry Mei Li against hi3
wishes when a happy solution oc-
curs to Mei Li. It means that she
will be able to marry Wang -Ta,
who now realizes his love for her,
and Sammy will be able to marry
Linda. It will be a double wedding
ceremony with everyone happy.
Other members of the cast and
.their roles are: Lewis Marchbanks,
Frankie Wing (Commodore Low);
ss Judy Johnson, the nightclub
singer; Roy Bradfield, Dr. Lu
Fong; Miss Patti Jo Patterson,
Madam Fong and Ronnie Mc-
Manus. Professor Ching.
Thank you for your contribu-
tions, jokes and ideas. This column
is to have a healthy future, we can
see now.
Some of the relic gifts are keys
to a 1962 Edsel, four pounds of
potato chips, seven empty peanut
butter jars, blueprints of the Ad-
ministration Building written in
Hebrew and two tickets for Hou-
dini's full evening of magic at the^
Majestic Theater.
More gifts were passes to Damn
Yankees, a" used Lawrence Welk
champagne bottle and a theme en-
titled "Should Sophomore Girls
be Allowed to Date after 6:30 on
Week-ends without Chape rones.?"
The most nauseating donation
was several pounds of limburger
cheese. We have searched this of-
fice for three days and cannot find
the foul dairy product. Will who-
ever hid it please come get it?
If this column doesn't appear
ni'i'.'in
STARTS THURSDAY ,
Open Weekdays 5:15
Shows 5:30-7:30-9:30 .
Open Saturday 11:45
Shd\ytj 12 noon 2-4-6-8-10
Open Sunday 1:45
. Show 2-4-6-8-10
^Aaults $1.00 - Children 50c
rvsM m
I' prettnU JL "♦ •
I THE
I i-OVfe
| STOfty
InCOlOft 3rd CINEMASCOPE
Starring
Lesl/e Caron-John Kerr
again, you will know the limburger
became stronger than my desire to
write.
Only five jokes were wholesome
enough for publication. Here were
the shortest and cleanest quips:
The Friendship 7 was so fast that
it left Cape Canaveral with' two
rabbits and returned with two
rabbits.
She had such long legs that when
she sat down they made a fist.
The teacher was so ugly that
when she walke'd in a room, the
mice hid.
" He thought a bebopper was
someone who bopped bees.
It was so cold that the chicketis
stood up to lay eggs.
We don't know who sent these
but it may have been an enemy.
With suggestions such as "Go
Hom^, Yank», "Get out of .town,"
"Scalp 'em, white man," "Go to
the back of the bus" and generally
"Break a leg," theretrjjiay not be a
healthy future for this "kid."
Did you know that Fink Ipswitch,
recently awarded seven pounds of
soggy onion rings for sleeping
through Col. Glenn's flight, is now
recovering from a brief illness.
Fink, from Turkey Turnover, Tex-
as. is ready to leave the infirmary
since his steady diet of PAC
tablets.
Education Students
Make Field Trips
Education students from TWC
will visit Fort Worth public schools
during Texas Public School Week,
March 5-9.
The field trip will necessitate two
busses Tuesday and Wednesday as
Dr. Bill Freeman, professor of edu-
cation, coordinates the tour for the
45 education students in each bus.
Schools which will be visited,
starting at 9:30 each morning, are
So^al Security Has
Career Opportunities
Mr. L. B. O'Neill, District Mana- (non-science, non-engineering) and
ger of the Social Security Admin- $6345 (science, engineering posi-
istration, will be at the placement tions.)
office on March 8, at 9 a.m. Attractive features of a Federal
Mr. O'Neill will be prepared to career that will be explained by
« * f« r , * ■ , ( w 4 W 4 * U W V • V V W V •* 4 4 * V A 4 4444 ^ 9 44 4 V
advise students of the career op- Mr. O Neill are merit promotions, Mitchell Blvd Elementary, Morn
portunities of the^,Federal Civil liberal annual and sick leave pro- ingside Elementarv, R. L. Paschal
Service available to them through visions, a beneficial retirement Senior High> jIcI^an junior High,
examinations for accountant, en- plan, comprehensive health bene- Qa[.. Xnoll Elementarv, Riverside
gineer, junior scientist in the fields professional recognition and Elementary, Carter-Riverside Sen-
of chemistry, metallurgy, mathe- off-the-job training and education- ior High ' and Riverside .Junior
matics and physics, student trainee al opportunities. High. '
irt* all branches of engineering, ac- ~
counting, chemistry, statistics,
mathematics, physics, economics,
biology, soil conservation, range
conservation and soil science and
the Federal Service Entrance Exa-
mination with its management in-
tern option. The FSEE is available
for all juniors and seniors regard-
less of their major fields of study.
The normal entrance salary for
non-science or non-engineering
graduates without any related work
experience is $4345 per annum;
the science or engineering grad-
uate, $5335 per annum. Graduates
in either of these categories finish-
ing with a "B" average or better,
or graduating in the upper 25 per
cent their class may be consid-
ered fo/~pbgitions paying $5355
.Jill,
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"VELVETONE"
Dry Cleaners
7 Mens Shirts $1.00
Laundried
With $1.00 Order
Dry Cleaning
.>
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COMPANY
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3204 Ave. A
JE 5-7565
TCU Select Series Special Spring Attraction
SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 8:00 P.M.
TCU Daniel-Meyer Coliseum, Fort Worth
SINGLE ADMISSION PRICES: $2.00. $2.60. $3.00, $3.50
Half Price Admission for Season Ticket Holders
Order Tickets by Mail from TCI' or at Centra! Ticket Office
r
v*
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The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1962, newspaper, March 6, 1962; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772467/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.