Page 4 THE BATTALION Wednesday, February 16, 195S CITS Lists Here Is Mrs. A&M Honor Students For Six Weeks Honor roll students of the A&M Consolidated high school have been announced. The following students were on the third six weeks honor roll: Ninth grade: Mary Margaret Hierth, Mary Lindra Catheart, Joe Randolph, Patricia Byrd, Jerry Mills, Junius Clark, Amy Norctoss, Nancy Smith. Tenth grade honor roll: Donald Patton, Charles Delaplane, James Martin, David Lloyd, Dali McCan- non, Larry Leighton, Maurice Oli- an, David Webb, Joe Marek, John Skrivanek, Jo Ann Walker, James Couch and Ronald Grady. Eleventh grade honor roll: Bob bie Miller, Ann Fleming, Margaret Barry, Mai-cia Smith, M a r il y n Davis. Twelfth grade honor roll: Travis Engelbrecht, Bonnie Carroll, Martha Blum, Eugenia Rush, Jack Smith, Bill Little, Betsy Burchard, Henry Phillips. The following students made the semester honor roll: ninth grade: Millie Caughlin, Mary Margaret Hierth, Christopher Kent, Joe Ran dolph, Jerry Mills, Junius Clark. Tenth grade honor roll, Donald Patton, Charles Delaplane, James Martin, Larry Leighton, Maurice Olian, David Webb, Jo Ann Walker, James Couch, Ronald Gandy. Eleventh grade semester honor roll: Margaret Berry, Marcia Smith, Marilyn Davis, Bobbie Mill er. Twelfth grade, Eugenia Rush, Bill Little Betsy Burchard, Jack Smith, Bonnie Carroll. (Ed note: These are the five finalist entries in the M r s. Texas A&M contest. From these five Mrs. Texas A&M will be chosen and announced at the married couples dance, the Ma roon and White Ball, Saturday in the ballroom of the Memorial Student Center.) Entry: Mrs. Mary Eleanor Wyatt, B-!)-A, College View. Letter: My wife should be Mrs. Texas A&M because without her I wouldn’t be able to graduate. In addition to being a wonderful moth er to our baby, Ellie manages to keep inside the G. I. bill. She also handles the jobs of house keeper, cook, morale booster, sec retary, and tutor. Some indication of the help she has been in getting me through A&M is reflected in these grade point rations . . . 0.98 before, and 2.58 after she took over. Ellie has been an “Aggie-Lover” ever since her high school days. She spent one year at Baylor, and then took her degree at TCU. However she always yells for the “Farmers” when we play Baylor, and once I heard her pulling for A&M against TCU. I have yet to find an Aggie tradition that is new to her. That diploma that I get on May 27 should have ‘Mr. and Mrs.’ writ ten on it. Two Clubs Plan Dance Thursday The A&M Employees Dinner club and Newcomers club will have dinner and dance together in a western atmosphere at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Memorial Student Center ballroom. The early part of the evening will feature square dancing to the music of the Capers Combo. liee Thompson will be caller of the squares. The dance is to be informal and sport and western-style clothes are to be worn. Entry: Mrs. Suzanne Petty, Jr., 402 Cooner St., College Station. Letter: Why I think my wife should be chosen as Mrs. Texas A&M. My wife considers her loyalty to me and my school her chief “job” at this, the most important phase of my life. Suzanne takes active part in all school functions and is as much a booster for A&M as I. However, this loyalty is not her most important qualification for being Mrs. Texas A&M. Certainly her neat house, thrifty shopping, and willingness to forfeit things all women desire are important. But more important is the encour agement she gives to others, for she knows what it means to be disheartened. Two days after our marriage she was stricken with polio, supposedly never to walk again. With courage and determi nation she fought, suffered, and won . . . not a complete recovery but enough to join me in estab lishing a Christian home for our now six-month-old daughter. To be selected to represent our school BATTALION CLASSIFIED *UY. SELL. RENT or TRADE. Rate* t cents • word per fnaertion with * 25 cent* minimum. Spare rate 1'n classified •ection, 65 cent* per column lnc|i. Send or call all classifieds to STUDENT PUB LICATIONS OPFUfE, Goodwin Hall. Tex as A&M. All ads must be received by I p.m. on the day before publication. • FOR RENT • I WOULD LIKE TO SHARE my home, including kitchen, piano, and T.V. with two working girls or two A&M Students. Phone 6-2723. ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment. Phone 6-2982 after 5:15. 63t2 LOST PAIR OF LICK BROWN glasses south of Sblsa Hall. J5.00 reward for return to 515 Cooner, C.S. 63t2 SMALL RED Nall Dachshund. Children’s pet. Phone 4-5913. Ray George, Re ward. 63t4 PICKETT and Echols Slide rule. Ralph Holt—Leggett 54. • WANTED • 100 USED slide rules. LOU. • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES €03 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST SOSA East 26th Call 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) QUALITY CLEANERS For The Best Work At The Lowest Prices See Us At 409 S. College Phone 2-1412 • FOR SALE • NEW WESTINOHOUSE single control elec tric blanket, never used, $20.00. Phone 4-7984. 63t3 1949 CROSLEY Station Wagon. 319 Kyle. Phone 6-2481. 63tf STUDENT DIRECTORIES now only 50c cents each. Get yours at the North Gate post office, M.S.C. or at the Publicalons Office. Goodwin Hall, Room 207. tf 1ERRY ANDERSON’S complete uniform for sale. Short coat, pinks, green and summer serge. All regulation. Sale at ^4 price or less. LOU. • FOUND • A WONDERFUL place to buy or sell. Battalion classified ads. Call 4-S324 or A-1149 for prompt courteous service. SPECIAL NOTICE SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OF STUDENTS AND FACULTY Registration forms for those interested In summer employment are now available at the Placement Office. Faculty members or students needing help In securing sum mer Jobs are urged to register early, so that the placement staff can be of max imum help. W. R. Horsley Director 6U3 Official Notices Official notices must be brought, mailed, or telephoned to aa to arrive la the Of fice of Student Publications <207 Goodwin, 4-6324, hour* 8-12, 1-6. Sally Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publica tion. — Manager. In order to permit students and faculty to attend the services In Guion Hall dur ing the annual Religious Emphasas Week, classes will be suspended according to the following schedule: Monday. February 21—11 a.m. to noon Tuesday and Wednesday February 22 and 23—10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Thursday and Friday February 24 and 25— 9 a m. to 10 a.m. J. P. Abbott 63t6 Dean of the College TERRY’S ART SHOP Framing — Artist Supplies Bryan, Texas 2917 Hwy. 6,S PHONE 3544 Student laboratory assistants are needed In the Physics Department, especially on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Qual ified students who have good records In 203 and 204 are advised to see the head of the Physics Department at once, if In terested. The pay scale is 80c per hour without experience and 90c per hour with experience. Room 201, Physics Building. J. O. Pot- er. head of Physics Department. 62t4 FISHERMAN Come By and See Our Line of FISHING EQUIPMENT Student Co-op Store CANDIDATE FOR DEGREE 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. VIarch 1st U 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. H. L. Heaton Registrar Sltll The Exchange Store will purchase used copied of the Zimmerman freshman Chem istry Text book. $4.00 will be paid for the complete book and $2.50 for the first half. T. 8. Burkhalter Chemistry Dept. would be a wonderful tribute to a person who exemplifies the quali ties that an A&M student’s wife should have. Then too, I love her. pg* Ad jm Entry: Mrs. Thelma Cardwell, 701 Dexter, College tSation. Letter: To whom it may con cern . . . Why my wife should be Mrs. Texas A&M: She can just as easily bake a pie, clean a room, change a baby’s diapers, lead a discussion, paint a picture, mend a shill;, sing a lullabye, and be no less than four different personali ties (maid, nurse, cook, and sweet heart) all within the span of a day’s time. She is indispensable to me, and is the making of my hap piness here at A&M. She is the personification of that spirit which drives Texas Aggies to do things greater than they dream possible. 43* it: EE flliih Organizes* Eta Kappa Nn The Electrical Engineering club has written for the necessary pa pers to become a member of the national Eta Kappa Nu, an honor society for electrical engineering majors, according to M. C. Hughes, head of the department. About 20 juniors and seniors are members of the present organiza tion. Temporary officers are Mel vin M. Newsome, president, and Donald E. Hightower, seci’etary. Eta Kappa Nu requires that its members be in the upper fourth of their class. An organization, before being admitted to the na tional organization, has to be active for 12 months. Entry: Mrs. Glenda Ann Durham, C-18-Z, College View. Letter: My wife should be Mrs. Texas A&M because “It would be a nice appreciation gift for all the effort she has put forth in so many little ways since we have been down here. I doubt if anyone else would think she has done any thing spectacular or great, and I know there are many other Aggie wives who have done just as much for their husbands, but being slightly prejudiced I think she’s done a wonderful job with little reward except a hope for the fu ture. She’s proud of the school I’ve chosen . . . she believes in it’s past and its future, its traditions, and its famous Aggie Spirit. “Mrs. Texas A&M” is only a title that will soon be forgotten by most, but if my wife is chosen to represent the typical Aggie wife, I know she would never forget the way I and my school have chosen to say “Thank you”.” Entry: Mrs. Maria Garza, Jr., 104 Sulphur Springs Rd., College Station. Letter: My wife should be Mrs. Texas A&M because of her devo tion to her husband, child, job, and home, and for being a true inspir ation both to her family and to everyone that knows and has known her. She is truly a symbol of good faith and friendly person ality, along with the great quali ties that attribute to her willing ness to make friends. To me she represents the real foundation of Aggie culture, comparing with an inscription on Ross’ statue. “Soldier, statesman, and knightly gentleman” “Wife, secretary, and loving mother”. To me she has given faith and sweet devotion; to our child, love and care; to her job, personality and knowledge; and, to all our friends, unselfish pride and court esy. She is, without a doubt, the glory of our home. NEW OFFICERS—The American Veterinary Medical Association Student Wives auxil iary met in the Memorial Student Center last week to hear Mrs. Walter Delaplane give her interpretation of two ancient fairy tales. Above are the officers and sponsors of the auxiliary. Standing, left to right, Mrs. DaLee Green, president; Mrs. Margaret Cline, president-elect; Mrs. Ruth Trimmier, reporter; Mrs. Jean Huff, treasurer; Mrs. Dorothy Criswell, parliamentarian; Mrs. W. W. Armistead, sponsor. Seated, Mrs. John Milliff, sponsor. Those officers not shown are Mrs. Nona Dancer, vice-president; Mrs. Jo Rene Helms, recording secretary; and Mrs. Sandra Coleman, corresponding secretary. Rev. Clem Hardy Student Movement Director Will Speak Here r f 0 £f e Assembly Speaker The Rev. Clem Hardy and Mrs. ^ Hardy, missionnries from South America, are the principal speak ers during the evangelistic cru sade at the First Baptist church, this week. The Rev. Robert Longshore, pas tor, said the Hardys will conduct revival services and special mis sion studies on work in Brazil be ing done by Southern Baptist mis sionaries. Mrs. Hardy will teach in the school of missions which will begin at 6:15 and last until 7 each evening. The mission study will be followed by an evangelistic message delivered by Hardy. Intended messages of the re vival will be to show the oneness of evangelism and missions, as suggested by the revival theme, “We Two Are One.” Music for the services will be conducted by Gene Layman. Other teachers for the mission studies are M. D. Woodruff and Mesdames M. D. Woodruff, L. E. Layman, C. S. Harris, and Robert II. Harms. TODAY The Rev. Bill Swift, director of the Methodist Student Movement at Southern Methodist university, will be the main leader at the Lakeview Methodist assembly to be held this weekend. The A&M Wesley foundation will hold its first spiritual life re treat at this assembly on the Methodist camp -grounds near Pal estine. Scouts To Meet The Aggie Explorer post of the Boy Scouts will meet at the YMCA at 8 p.m. tomorrow to plan activ ities for the spring semester, an nounced Doug Duffey, acting crew leader. R. H. Fletcher of the me chanical engineering department is advisor. CIRCLE ■TODAY thru FRIDAY ! CinemaScop! m !• 77— Thur. — Fri. “THE LAW vs. BILLY THE KID” Scott Brady — Technicolor — Also — Barry Sullivan “THE MIAMI STORY’ — A L S O — “NEVER LET ME GO” Clark Gable The Rev. Robert Monk, Wesley director, stated that “this will be a time in which one will have an opportunity to enrich his spiritual life through group questioning af ter a deeper understanding of Jesus Christ and His Gospel.” The theme of the retreat is “Jesus Christ.” Cost of the retreat will be $4.50 per person. Today thru Sautrday DAMOCR ROAMS THE KOREAN SKIES! William HOLDEN Brace KELLY Fredric MARCH ' Mickey ROONEY THURSDAY & FRIDAY • WARNER BROS, present' The BRIDGES at TOKO-RI DOLORES DORN-MARIE WINDSOR WINSTON MULE* .tatl, a transcona ENTERPRISES PRQ0 ANDRE deTOTH EARNER BROS. When the stag-line wolves rush your delectable date... For more pure pleasure... No other cigarette is so rich-tasting yet so mild! P. S. 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