Page 4 THE BATTALION Friday, October 12, 1951 Sign Contest Winners VMM, Tineas mt orr All TAIf' ] T«€ ¥ €&u mrs ; AS Hi u . liCtliTi* A cm thuse riiiAs win 'wai tucy mm urhimA mm Ttc AQCIiS- JiTprr illii i F'irst place award in the Battalion-sign-of-the- week contest was given to the Infantrymen of B Company. Second place was awarded to A Company Engineers. Eugene Rush, local in surance man, will give $5 to the winners and $2.50 to the runners-up. A&M Air Officer Stationed at BAFB Second Lt. John G. Tsesmelis of Alice, an Air Force ROTC grad uate of A&M returns to the neigh borhood of his alma mater upon transfer to Bryan Air Force Base. He left his job as officer in charge of the bachelor officer’s mess at Randolph AFB to assume a food service office position at BAFB. Lt. Tsesmelis has been at Ran dolph for approximately three months, being assigned here for on-the-job training following grad uation from A&M last June. USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO MJT, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates > ... 3c a word per Insertion with a J5c minimum. Space rate in classified Jsctlon .... 60c per column-inch. Send Vi classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. AH ads must be received in Stu- lent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • FOR RENT • 2 BEDROOMS, double beds, bath between rooms. See after 3 p.m. Mrs. Paschall, 1208 East 30th. • FOR SALE • FREE: $6.30 worth’ of RECORDS with the purchase of a $12.95 RCA 45 RPM Record Player. Shaffer’s Book Store, North Gate, Across fom the Post Office. f8-IN. REEL-TYPE Firestone power mow er with Briggs-Stratton motor. Good condition; slightly used, $75. Ph. 3-1042, after 5 p.m. USED SHORT COAT, winter uniform shirts and pants, Green and Pink. Me dium sizes. Phone 2-5490. OFFICER’S winter uniform. Size 38-Reg ular. Phone 3-3587. USED ARMY uniform, consisting of blous es, pinks, and green pants, caps, ties, and shirts. Small sizes: 34-35. Entire lot at a bargain. Phone 4-8182 after 5 p.m. SMALL used G. E. refrigerator. 601 Jersey St. Phone 4-4777. TURTLES, TROPICAL FISH, GOLD FISH, BIRDS, DOG AND CAT SUPPLIES • Gilkey’s Pet Cottage 301 E. 28th St. • WANTED • JtIDERS to and from Bryan Field, or anyone interested in forming a car pool. Contact Mrs. C. E. Schluter, Box 2205, College Station, or A-8-W, College View. • HELP WANTED • YOUNG MAN with car for part-time work on Sunday mornings. Call Jack Rising- er. Phone 6-2253 after 5. PART-TIME or full-time grocery clerk. Experienced clerk preferred. Southside Food Market. STUDENT to sell advertising for student magazine. Immediately. See Joe Ar nett in Battalion Office. WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 502 N. Main. Bryan. Texas. USED builder’s transit and tripod. 6-3444 after five p.m. Call • SPECIAL NOTICE • $25 REWARD for person who finds yellow gold Longines ladies’ wrist watch. Phone collect—Winona Franks, Atwood 4003—Houston, Texas. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th (Across from Court House) Call 2-1662 for Appointment RADIOS & REPAIRING Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP Phone 4-4114 LOST ONE GOLD dancer ear clip. In or on the grounds of Memorial Student Center. Generous reward. Contact Mrs. A. G. McGill, Phone 2-1626. BLACK Schaeffer pencil with gold top, North Gate vicinity. $5 reward. Sen ior Dorm 10, Room 322. Directory of Business Services ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. Official Notice Second installment, Payable October 1-18: Board to November 21 $44.90 Room Rent to November 21.... 11.35 Laundry to November 21 3.65 Total payable to fiscal dept $59.90 All club, society, and organizational group officers are reminded of the Organ izational Activities Regulation which re quires registration of all officers of these clubs within thefirst month of each session. The president of all such organizations should register the names of ail officers, their addresses and a statement of the place and time of meetings with the Office of Student Activities, 2nd floor, Goodwin Hall as soon as possible. This regulation includes all class officers, home town club officers, technical society officers, and so cial group officers, at Texas A&M College. PETE HARDESTY, Club Advisor October 31 is the last date on which orders for Senior rings may be placed for delivery before the Christmas holidays. Any student who lacks not more than eight hours of having completed the num ber of hours required through the junior year of his curriculum and who lias earned an equal number of grade points and who is in good standing may purchase the A&M ring. All rings must be paid for in full when placing the order. The Ring Window is open only from 8 a.m. until 12 noon daily. H. L. HEATON, Registrar Identification Cards which were made in connection with registration for the cur rent semester will be ready for distribution Thursday, Oct. 11, 1951 at 8 a.m. in the Registrar’s Office. They should be claimed in person immediately. H. L. HEATON, Registrar Students wishing to serve as tutors should contact James Y. Alexander in the Registrar’s Office immediately. The procedure for a student to be listed by the Registrar’s Office as a qualified tutor is as follows: (1) The student should contact James Y. Alexander in the Registrar’s Office. (2) There the student will be given neces sary forms to fill out and have ap proved by the department head in which field he wishes to tutor students. (3) The student is then placed on the qual ified list of tutors by the Registrar. This list is made available to students needing tutors. There is currently a shortage of student tutors. Pay for tutoring varies, but gen erally averages about 75 cents an hour, and in some cases the hourly wage paid probably will be higher. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES Any student who normally expects to complete all the requirements for a degree by the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s Office NOW, and make formal application for a degree. November 1st is the deadline for filing an application for a degree to be conferred at the end of the current semester. This deadline applies to both graduate and un dergraduate students. Those who have not already done so, shouuld make formal ap plication in the Registrar’s Office imme diately. A student who is a candidate for a de gree must be registered for the courses necessary to complete the requirements of his curriculum, and must not lack a grade point ratio in excess of 1.50 in his major field, and overall for his work on that semester, in order to meet the grade point requirements for graduation. H. L. HEATON, Registrar. sAtmimw '^tCONOMP SAFE-T-WAY TAXI Phone 2-1400 For That . . . -M^nniueriartj, lUeJJinfj, $irtliclay. or fjift Caldwell's Jewelry 112 N, Main Bryan, Tex. PHONE 2-2435 Officers Elected By A&M 4-H Club The A&M 4-H Club met and elected officers for the coming year. Those elected were Ed Hill, pres ident; Doug Riff, vice-president; Malcomb Stratemann, secretary; William Thomas, treasure!'; Dick Selminger, reporter; and Frankie Prohaska, program chairman. Strateman gave the reading of the minutes of the last meeting and Ed Hill gave a report on the sale of 4-H supplies and photos at the Texas 4-H Round-up held on the campus in June. It was decided that a barbecue be held for the club members at A. H. Karcher’s house in College Hills on Friday, Oct. 26. At The College Station Churches This Sunday « 0 » The Methodist Aggie Depart ment will meet at the Church at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow for a picnic. Transportation will be furnished to the picnic grounds. Special guests for the occasion will be 25 young ladies from Sam Houston State Teachers .College! Sunday School starts at 9:50, and the Wesley Foundation Church School for Aggies begins at 9:45 a. m. Sunday at the A&M Metho dist Church. “God’s Enabling Grace” will be the topic of the Rev. James F. Jackson’s sermon at the’10:50 a. m. Worship Service. Ex-Student Hurt In Korean Fighting A former A&M student, Billy E. Sims, ’52, has been wounded in the Korean fighting. According to a letter received by Don Young, senior ag engineer ing major from Bryan, Sims was wounded by shrapnel in both legs. His left leg was broken. As a freshman here in 1948, Sims, whose home is Childress, was in Company 4. Asa sopho more he was in A Infantry. Now in a hospital in Japan, he is undergoing treatment for his wounds, Young said. His address there is: Pfc. Billy E. Sims U. S. 54028876 6162 Hospital Group A. P. O. 944 c/o P. M. San Francisco, Cal. Underground sulfur deposits in Texas and Louisiana are melted with hot water and pumped to the surface. Christian Science Services “Are Sin, Disease, and Death Real?” will be the question ans wered by the Christian Science Lesson-Sermon Sunday, 11 a. m., in the YMCA Chapel. A&M Church of Christ Bible School will start at 9:45 a.m. Sunday at the A&M Church of Christ. Mr. James F. Fowler will conduct the Morning Worship Service at 10:45 a. m. St. Mary’s Catholic Chapel Confessions will be heard at 6:45 a. m. Saturday in St. Mary’s Chapel. Mass will be conducted at 8:30 a. m. and 10 a. ra. Sunday. A&M Christian Church Coffee Hour will begin at 9:30 a. m. Sunday at the A&M Christ ian Church on Old Highway 6. The Aggie Class and Sunday School classes start at 9:45 a. m. Worship Service, 11 a. m., will be led by the Rev. Clarence Keetch. The American Lutheran Congregation: The American Lutheran Congre gation and Texas A&M Lutheran Student Foundation, Inc. will have Church School and Bible Class at 9:30 a. m. Sunday. Thomas H. Swygert, pastor, will bring his morning message at 10:45 a. m. Bethel Lutheran Church Sunday School and Bible Class es are set for 9:30 a. m. at the Bethel Lutheran Church, 800 S. College. Worship Service, led by the Rev. Wm. C. Peterson, will begin at 10:45. St. Thomas Episcopal Church Holy Communion at 8 a. m. pre cedes the Aggie Coffee Club at “M IMS” THE WORD FOR ft FOOTBALL 1903 College Road Ph. 3-1003 Ph. 6-6694 9:30, at St. Thomas Episcopal’ Church. Church School is at 9:30 a. m. The Rev. O. G. Helvey will con duct the Morning Prayer and Ser mon at 11 a. m. Evening Prayer starts at 6:30 p. m., followed by Young People’s Service League at 7 p. m. A&M Presbyterian Church Church School begins at 9:45 a. m. Sunday at the A&M Presby terian Church. Worship, led by the Rev. Norman Anderson, is at 11 a. m. junior League and Inter mediate League is set for 5 p. m. Sunday. Jewish Services Jewish Services will be held at 7:15 p. m. Friday in the YMCA Chapel. Wednesday, 7:15 p. m., is time set for a mid-week service in Room 2D of the MSC. First Baptist Church The First Baptist Church of College Station will have Sunday School at 9:45 a. m., followed by the Worship Service at 10:50. Ask About the . . . TWO BY TWO CLASS for Aggie Couples First Baptist Church College Station LEGAL HOLIDAY Friday, October 12, 1951 being a Legal Holiday, in observance of Columbus Day, the undersigned will ob serve that date as a Legal Holiday and not be open for business. s First National Bank City National Bank First State Bank & Trust Co. Bryan Building and Loan Ass’n. College Station State Bank You Gain When You Go To Church BANKING SERVICE COLLEGE STATION’S OWN College Station State Bank North Gate Central Texas Hardware Co. Bryan, Texas • HARDWARE • CHINAWARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” American Laundry — and — Dry Cleaners Bryan, Texas Serving the College Station and Bryan Communities Since 1909 First State Bank & Trust Co. BRYAN, TEXAS Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Henry A. Miller & Co. North Gate Phone 4-1145 HARDWARE FURNITURE GIFTS Calendar of Church Services A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH 9:45 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:15 A.M.—Youth Meeting FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 9:30 A.M.—Sunday School 10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship ST. MARY’S CHAPEL St. Mary’s, Sunday Mass, 9 a.m. A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship Service 6:30 P.M.—Student League and Fellowship CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 7:30 P.M.—Wednesday Service (3rd Wed.) 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH 9:30 A.M.—Church School, Bible Classes 10:45 A.M.—Worship Service with Holy Communion. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A.M.—Church School, Aggie Coffee Club 11:00 A.M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon 6:30 P.M.—Evening Prayer BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 800 S. College Ave. Bryan, Texas 9:30 A.M.—Sunday School and Bible Classes 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship Service Wednesday Vespers—7:30 p.m. The Rev. Wm. C. Petersen, pastor COLLEGE STATION BAPTIST CHURCH 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 10:50 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:15 P.M.—Training Union 7:15 P.M.—Evening Worship £7 EITGHING-FQSTS Here and there in some of our cities and towns one finds narrow streets, still lined with hitching-posts—beloved relics of an almost for gotten era! But man hasn’t really abandoned the hitch ing post. He has converted it. Today he calls it a parking lot, or a terminal, or an airport. But it’s really the old hitching-post, just the same. In fact, we never will oUt-grow our need for the hitching-post. No matter how far or fast we travel, there will always be places we like to stop and stay awhile. Odd how our spiritual needs resemble the physical . . . The soul needs a hitching post, too. As we try to keep up with the ever-quick ening pace of modern life, we need the sound, solid, unwavering truth of our Christian religion. And come Sunday morning, there’s no place like the Church to stop and stay awhile! THE CHURCH FOR ALL ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest fac tor on earth for the building of character and good citizenship. It is a storehouse of spiritual values. Without a strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should attend services regularly and sup port the Church. They are: (1) For his own sake. (2) For his children's sake. (3) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and ma terial support. Plan to go to church regularly and read your Bible daily. Book Chapter Verses Sunday ... .John 3 1-17 Monday ...Proverbs 22 24-29 Tuesday .. .Hebrews 13 1-8 Wednesd'y Jeremiah 17 5-1 Thursday . .Jeremiah 31 21-3 Fr ‘day I Timothy 1 12-J Saturday... Matthew 6 25-3' l,Kd«t»A+fcS«rrfM.5vMl>» r ». v *- j. ...v.l City R * 1 Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Bryan, Texas LAUNDROMAT HALF-HOUR LAUNDRY & CLEANERS Authorized Dealer Hamilton (Home) Dryer One Block East of College View Apts. College Station, Texas f^eclmoncl l\eaf dilate C^o. MRS. HAROLD E. REDMOND Res. Phone 6-3432 Real Estate Home Builders Rentals Bryan Office Room 312 Varisco Bldg. Phone 2-1634 College Office 115 Walton Drive Phone 4-4701 The Church is The Core of the Community ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE SUNDAY! (Student Publications) MELLO KREAM “A Nutritious Food” Lilly Ice Cream Co. ’ Bryan, Texas