The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1954 Page: 3 of 6
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THE REDBIRD
Page 3
Friday, December 10, 1954
SaffuJs VR[ie
Where the Lamar mm
Meets for tho^e wifi
day snacks.
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NEXT TO SOUTH PARK DRIVE INTO*
Teachers-in-Traing Begin Work
Of Observing, Practice Teaching
SOCIAL SCIENCE GROUP
SCHEDULES SPEAKER
E. F. Christman of the
Beaumont Family Service
Bureau spoke on family
counseling and the educa-
tional requirements for per-
sons entering social wel-
fare and family counseling
work at a meeting of the
Social Science club Dec-
ember 6.
The lights went out in the
Science Building during the
meeting. Consequently,
the club members munched
cookies by the light of a
Bunsen burner at the con-
clusion of Mr. Christman's
address.
The next meeting will be
announced in a later issue
of the Redbird.
Fifty-three teachers-in-
training began six weeks of
observation of teachers in
five different school sys-
tems Monday. Following
their observing, they will
do student-teaching for 14
weeks.
In the Beaumont City-
school system are: John
Donaldson, Charles Smith,
Virginia Wallace, Beau-
mont high; June Turner,
French high; Bill Griswold,
Mary Hamilton, Betty John-
son, Ross Stroble, Crockett
junior high.
Bonnie Fabriguze, Fran-
ces Peveto, Rose Marie
O'Brien, Dowling junior
high; Bobbie Allen, Broad-
way; Eloise Green, Ollie
Lankford, Longfellow;
Grace England, Mary Ann
Loomer, Ogden; and Janie
Findley, Louise Hollywoo4
Pennsylvania.
South Park schools have:
Joan Broussard, Leona
Cole, Helen Jeffry, Willie
LaGrone, Norman Miksch,
Mary Sue Moffett, Thayer
Sharp, Betty Welch,Marilyn
Fuller, South Park high.
WileyWilson, Mildred
Smith, Roy Culver, Mac-
Arthur; Dorothy Andrus,
The exciting new idea behind
the motor amicChevrolet
The Bel Air 4-Door Sedan—one of 14 new Fisher Body beauties in three new series
Maybe once in a car-buying lifetime, you
come across something that breaks all the
old patterns and establishes new ones. This
is that kind of car. This is the true story of
how Chevrolet and General Motors shaped
a new idea in steel.
Like most good ideas, this one is pretty simple. Chevrolet and
General Motors set out to build the first low-priced car that
would:
Power Beyond Compare!
You also feel the new idea
quickly . . . quick power like
a panther’s paw with the new
“Turbo-Fire V8” (162 h.p.)
and two new “Blue-Flame” 6’s.
And sparking this perform-
ance is a 12-volt electrical
system giving you better igni-
tion, faster starting, greater electrical reserve for any of the
power assists you .might desire. You have a transmission
choice of economical Overdrive and improved, automatic
Margie Cude, Barbara Joy
Chamblee, Peggy McGuire,
Bingman; Naoma Ballard,
Lorene Martin, Betty Mon-
crief, Pietzsch; Billie Joyce.
Thomas, Monica Daugh-
erty, Marjorie Peebles,
Giles.
Observing in the Port Ar-
thur schools are: Don Cole-
man, Thomas Jefferson;
Normareen Smith, Roy Sil-
vey, Woodrow Wilson jun-
ior high; and Karl Hollier,
Port Acres.
Gene S h a w a n d Manley
Beasley are in Nederland
junior high and Donnie Delk
Patricia Sheffieldand Betty
Ann Miller are in Nederland
elementary.
In Orange schools, Jo Ann
Jackson is at Anderson and
Muriel Urban is at Carr
junior high.
Dale Leggett and Willie
LaGrone are to be assign-
ed.
Working with the teacher
trainingprogram are mem-
bers of the Lamar Tech
faculty, including two from
the Department of Educa-
tion, three from the Depart-
ment of Health and Physi-
cal Education and two from
the Department of Music.
I bring you the very freshest and finest styling to be had. PowergUde (optional at extra cost) or standard shift.
! bring you the most advanced engine design and engineering features.
• bring you the kind of performance and the kind of ride that have
never been available before in a low-priced car. ■
• bring you the highest quality of manufacture and materials.
All this in Chevrolet’s price field? That did take some doing!
And isn’t it logical that only Chevrolet and General Motors
have the people, skills, resources and facilities, to carry out this
exciting new idea? Here is how
this new Chevrolet changes all
your ideas about cars!
Real Show-Car Styling!
Tour eye tells you the Motoramic
Chevrolet is no styling “patch-up”
job. A rakish, low profile . . . soft
swiftness from its sleek rear fenders
to its wide-eyed Sweep-Sight windshield ... a new outlook for motoring.
And that outlook doesn’t change when you slip inside . . . exciting fabrics
and trim are harmonized with the whole car.
A Sensational Ride!
You live the new idea instantly
. . . you glide . . . actually glide
because spherical joints “roll with
the punch” of the road in Chev-
rolet’s new Glide-Ride front sus-
pension. And outrigger rear springs mean new balance in
turns . . . turns made so effortless by new ball-race steering.
And when you stop suddenly, new Anti-Dive braking control
checks that nosing down in front . . . you get “heads up” stop-
ping. Tubeless tires mean much greater protection against
blowouts. And with new high-level ventilation there’s fresher air.
Even Air Conditioning!
And if you desire the convenience of power assists (optional
at extra cost) . . . you’ll find new power-steering and improved
power brakes on all models. Power-controlled windows and
powershift seat are available on the Bel Air and “Two-Ten”
models, while air conditioning may be added on V8 models.
Won’t You Try It?
Here, we can only tell you how successfully the Motoramic Chevrolet
expresses the new idea behind it. But the car itself can -quickly show you!
Come in for a demonstration drive, won’t you, first chance you get.
MORE THAN A NEW CAR,
A NEW CONCEPT OF LOW-COST MOTORING
Everything’s new in the
motoramic
CHEVROLET
Drive with care . . . EVERYWHERE! Make December 15 and every day SAFE-DRIVING DAY!
Childs Named Head
Of Store Managers
William G. Childs, mana-
ger of the Lamar Tech cam-
pus store, has been elected
chairman of the Southwes-
tern Region of the National
Associationof College
Stores.
Mr. Childs, in his fourth
year with Lamar Tech,
heads an area including
Texas, Louisiana, Oklaho-
ma, Arkansas and New
Mexico.
All college bookstores in
these states hold member-
ship in the national asso-
ciation. Annual meetings
are held to discuss com-
mon p r o b 1 ems with pub-
lishers and manufacturing
company representatives.
Mr. Childs will be respon-
sible for program and other
arrangements for the 1955
meeting to be held in Hous-
ton.
Advertising in The Red-
bird is the best investment
possible for returns obtain-
able. Call for rates.
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Abshier, Ann. The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1954, newspaper, December 10, 1954; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth499098/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.