Church Services Set FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH “God’s Plan for Financing His •Kingdom” is the sermon topic of the Rev. R. D. Longshore for the 11 a.m. worship Sunday. Sunday School ‘ will meet at 9:40 a.m., Training Union begins at 6.15 p.m. and the evening worship is at 7.15 p.m. The 8:30 a.m. worship service has been discontinued. A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH Dr. W. C. Jones will speak on “God’s Amazing Gift” at the 11 a.m. service Sunday. Coffee and doughnuts will be served at 9:30 a.m. Sunday School starts at 9:45 a.m. ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL Mass is said every weekday at 6:30 a.m. Confessions are heard from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Saturday and before Mass on Sunday which is said at 7 and 9 a.m. CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Services will be held at 10 a.m. Sunday in the YMCA Chapel. COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD The Rev. R. L. Tumlison, pastor, jvill speak on “The Ten Command ments” at the 11 a.m. worship service. Sunday School will meet at 9:45. The Christ ambassadors meet at 6:30 p.m. and the evening service begins at 7:30. A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday School starts at 9:45 a.m.; the morning service is at 10:45 a.m. The Ladies Bible Class met this morning at 9:30 to study the “Women of the Bible”. Mrs. Mont Whitson was in charge. The young people’s class meets at 6:15 Sunday night and the evening serv ice begins at 7:15. WESLEY FOUNDATION Church School will be held at 9:45 a.m. Sunday at the Founda tion. A fellowship supper begins at 5:30 Sunday night. OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN CHURCH “T^vo Temptations” (Matthew 4) is the sermon topic for the 10:45 a.m. worship service. The Rev. Edwin Svendsen will deliv el* the » sermon. Church school begins at 9:30 a.m. The Choir meets at 7:30 p.m. tonight. On Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. the Women’s Missionary So ciety will meet at the Church. FAITH EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCfH The Rev. R. F. Buck will report on the Senate Meeting which he recently attended in Lancaster, Pa., at the 10:30 a.m. worship serv ice Sunday. Sunday School will meet at 9:15 a.m. On Wednes days choir rehearsals begin at 7 p.m. and 8 p.m., junior and senior groups respectively. A special supper sponsored by Powell to Head AAUW Branch a Mrs. Frank Powell will serve as president of the local AAUW dur ing 1956-57. First vice-president is Mi’s. R. O. Berry; Mrs. George Huebner, Jr., is second vice-presi dent; Mrs. Lola B. Head will serve as secretary; Mrs. Issac Peters is treasurer and Mrs. Eugene Rush is parliamentarian. Committees set up for the year’s work are Arts, Mrs. Walter Dela- plane; Education, Mrs. S. O. Brown; Fellowship, Mrs. G. E. Potter; Hospiflity, Mrs. J. G. Pot ter; International Relations, Mrs. H. R. Blank. Other committee chairmen are Mrs. R. F. White, legislative; Mrs. W. G. McCully, news letter; Mrs. W. L. Russell, publicity; Mrs. F. B. Brown III, ^social studies; and Mrs. J. H. Sor rels, state fellowship chairman and parliamentarian. the Women’s Guild for all Aggies will be given Sunday night. The recreation begins at '5 p.m. and the supper will be served at 6:30 p.m. A&M METHODIST CHURCH The Rev. Nolan Vance will speak on “The Onlooker” at the 10:55 a.m. worship service. Sunday School meets at 9:45 a.m. At 5:45 p.m. the Intermediate MYF wall meet. Senior MYF is sched uled for 6:30 p.m. BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER A fellowship beginning at 7:15 p.m. tonight is for all Aggie stm dents and freshmen. Vespers will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the BSU. ST. THOMAS CHAPEL The Rev. Roger Gilley will preach the sermon at the 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. morning prayer and sermons. Holy Communion is at 8 a.m. and Church School begins at 9:30 a.m. A coffee hour will be held in the Parish Hall between the two morn ing services from 10:30 to 11. On Monday at 9:30 a.m. the Women’s Auxiliary will meet in the Parish Hall to hear about “The Role of the Women’s Auxiliary in the Life of the Church”. The meet ing will be preceded by a coffee. The Rev. Robert L. Darwall will present the program. Mrs. George L. Huebner, Jr., is Chairman of the Auxiliary. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Three special services will be held Sunday at which Everett Howard, missionary from Cape Verde Island, will speak. The serv ices will be at 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. The Sunday School lesson will be held at the Dinner which will be on the Church ground at 12:30 p.m. Bob Godfrey will be soloist at the morning service and the Junior Choir will perform at the evening service. Social Whirl Electrical Engineering Wives Club will meet on Monday, Sept. 17, for a get-acquainted social to welcome new members. All E. E. wives are invited to attend. The meeting is at 8 p. m., Room 203, YMCA. * * * THE A&M GARDEN CLUB will hold its first Fall meeting tomor row at 2:30 p.m. in the Social Room of the MSC. Mrs. Edward Made- ley will be presiding at this meet ing which is open to membership. Jj: tff MECHANICAL ENGINEERING WIVES Club will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the YMCA, Room 202. C. W. Crawford, head of the ME Department will address the husband-wife meeting. s{; * s{c GEOLOGY WIVES CLUB has scheduled a meeting for Monday night at 8 in the Lecture Room of the Geology Building, Nancy Mc Carty, president, has announced. * of: THE BOWLING LEAGUE will elect oficers for the Fall semester on Tuesday night at 8 in the Ra dio Room of the Bowling Alley. All Wives Clubs wishing to enter teams should have representatives at this initial meeting. * * * Officers of the ARCHITECTS WIVES CLUB will meet at the home of its president Barbara Jones, B-17-Z, College View, at 8 tonight to plan a Fall semester tea. * * * The A&M Chapter of UNIVER SITY DAMES CLUB extends an invitation to all college wives to attend its meetings held the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month in the South Solarium of the YM CA. Dues are 75 cents per semes ter. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY With the knowledge of God’s all power, mankind can be free of fear, according to the lesson-sermon on the subject “Matter,” which will be read at the services Sunday at 11 a.m. Biblical selections will in clude Psalms 46 and 81. Sunday School meets at 9:30 a.m. The Christian Science Reading Room ia open on Mondays 2:30 to 6 p.m. BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday School begins at 9:30 a.m.; the morning worship will be at 10:45 a.m. Religious Courses Will Be Taught Beginning this fall, Mont Whit son will assume duties as teacher of Religious Educatation undor the supervision of the A&M Church of Christ and in cooperation with the College. Mi% Whitson «pent 5 years at Texas Tech in Lubbock teach ing Bible course under a- similar arrangement. Courses of study for this se mester include the following: Old Testament Survey, Suiwey of the New Testament, The Minor Prophets, The Book of Acts an4 The Life of Jesus. Bob Davidson, beginning his third year with the; student pror gram at the Church of Christ, will visit the Aggies on the campus and direct their : work at the church except for the credit coudses. Be- causk of the great interest mani fested in student work, the Eldei’s have'; recently purchased a large building across the street from the Church to be used for student activities. Courses in Religious Education have; been offered under the auspices of the Church of Christ for Lweny years. The courses were taught by two ministers R. B. Sweet and James Fowler. 34 Aggies Admitted To Medical School Thirty-four 1956 A&M med ical students were accepted by five Texas medical and dental schools to begin ad vanced work in those fields the Department of Biology an nounced recently. The largest number of students will attend the University of Texas medical branch in Galveston. These include Billy Joe Bardin, Walker Barton Griffith, James J. Guiber- teau, J. T. Halbert, Eldon O. Har rison, Billie M. Havens, John H. Huffmcyer, Carlos Horacio Mata and Samuel Robei’t Newsop III. Ba f sden L. Priddy, John D. Scz’og- gin, John H. Simms, Harold James Springfield, Clarence B. Thomas, Charles Frank Webber, Robert Erickson and Drew Davis Williams. Those attending Southwestern Medical School in Dallas will be Bobby Gene Black, Anton B. Brack, j Edwin Perry Clarke, William Mel- i vin Midgctt, George Thielmann, William Darrell Willis Jr. and Joe Max Word. Attending Baylor Medical College in Dallas will be Alexander Jack- son Ashmore, Jimmy Clay Burns, William Marvin Cocke Jr. and James Ergle Cook Jr. Buddy Duane Patterson will attend the Baylor Dental College in Dallas. Scheduled to go to the Texas Dental School in Houston are Gerald W. Carpenter, James M. Hebert, Henry Charles Moeller, Bai’den Elbert Patterson and Ruede Monroe Wheeler. Rummage Sale The Christian Women’s Fellow ship of the A&M Christian Church is sponsoring a rummage sale Sat urday beginning at 9 a.m. on the corner of East 25th St., back of Orr’s Food tenter in Bryan. HILLCREST Sporting Goods and Hardware Co. RIFLES, SHOTGUNS REVOLVERS AND AUTOMATIC PISTOLS Financed at Bank Rates 2013 S. COLLEGE Phone TA 3-3299 Back To School SPECIAL!! LEE RIDER Siim and Regular Cowboy Pants 2 pr. for $6.95 This Week Only Unconditionally Guaranteed Against Shrinkage LOUPOT H. L. Kidd Writes The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas Thursday, September 13, 1956 PAGE 7 It’s a shadowy world in which we live Muskrat for Dark Holiday For Oil Magazines Harry L. Kidd, of A&M’s Eng lish department, was the author of articles published in . the August issues of two specialized petroleum magazines. His article, “Human Relations Is A Two-Way Street,” appeared in World Oil, a specialized publication for exploration, drilling, producing operations and management. The article discussed how well-planned human relations programs can re sult in dollars and cents profits to employees and management, and was listed in the commentary sec tion of the magazine as a “man agement must” concerning reading value of article to management per sonnel. A companion article, “Why Hu man Relations,” appeared in the August issue of Petroleum Refin er. Kidd also wrote the script for, and directed the production of, the “Quest For Water” radio program series dealing with Texas’ basic water problems and carried this spring over many Texas radio sta- By WALT KELLY Lemmings Leap, Noi’way, Aug. 14—(Special and Delayed)—Pogo adherents, meeting in secret ses sion here today, have drawn up plans for a march on the capital in support of their candidate for President of the United States. An unofficial Muskrat observer said that foremost in their drive will be a plank to make Groundhog Day a national holiday throughout the world. “It’s a shadowy world in which we live,” said the Muskrat spokes man who was a delegate without portfolio, “and it is time that we turned the tables on shadows everywhere. The Lemmings have decided to a man to walk, leap and swim to Bangor, Maine, which they claim is the rightful capital of the U.S., to press for action. against ‘shadow mo tigers’.’' The Muskrat, who refused to be identified (he claimed to be under subpoena ia a shadowy fur trade), went on to hypothesize that Pogo would be receptive to the new plank. “For one thing it will make a regulation holiday of Feb. 2, which will allow the ordinary work ing Groundhog an extra day off. He will be able to sleep late—even another 24 hours. This will mean that despite the pos^bility of the Groundhog seeing and being frightened by his shadow when he DOES arise, he cannot then be fiaghtened officially. If he is frightened on Feb. 3, a date held to be unconstitutional by many political experts, there can then be no official recognition of his scare. If, at that time, the Ground hog retreats to his burrow and stays underground for another six weeks, it will amount to a sit- down strike and the Weather Bu reau will be under compulsior; to cut winter off within thirteen days and proceed with spring as a nat ural consequence. If the Ground hog- is frightened on Feb. 3, he’ll just have to fact facts: he is go ing to be frightened all by him self.” Only A Drop EMMETT, Idaho (AP)—G e m County sheriff’s officers got set for a small flood when they heard that a two-ton milk truck had over- turmed at the top of a hill near here. But trey relaxed when the driver climbed out of the wreck age. He said the truck contained only one can of sour milk. The Church... For a Fuller life... For You... CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship 7:15 P.M.—Evening Service OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN CHURCH 9:30 A.M.—Church School 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship A&M METHODIST CHURCH 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:00 & 6:45 P.M.—MYF Meeting CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 10:00 A.M.—Morning Worship COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:30 7*.M.—Young People’s Service 7:30 P.M.—Evening Worship A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH 8:30 a.m.—Coffee Time 8:45 a.m.—Sunday School 10:00 a.m.—Morning Service A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 8:45 a.m.—Worship 9:45 a.m.—Church School ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL 7:00 a.m.—Mass 9:00 a.m.—Mass CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9:30 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 9:40 a.m.—Church School 11:00 a.m.—Worship 7:00 p.m.—Training Union 8:00 p.m.—Worship CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 10:00 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 7:00 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7:45 P.M.—Preaching Service BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 800 S. College Ave. Bryan, Texas 9 :30 A.M.—Church School ^.0:45 A.M.—Morning Worship FAITH EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH 9:15 A.M.—Sunday School 10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship 7:30 P.M.—Evening Service ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL 8:00 a.m,—Holy Communion 8:30 a.m.—Sunday School 9:30 a.m.—Morning prayer and sermon WHAT'S COOKING-? 1 -m Ji mm r TM; ; : '.f It’s fun to mix a lot of things and wonder^?"'' how they’ll “turn out.” It’s fun until you try ||. to eat your own “exter-special” muffins. Then you wish you had used Mommy’s old-fash ioned recipe. Thousands of parents are sharing today the disillusionment that is in store for our little cook—but on a more bitter scale. As juvenile offenders are herded into our police stations, courts and reformatories, heart-broken par ents watch and wonder. What did they do wrong? Why didn’t Johnny turn out to be a boy they could be proud of? When you try to answer those questions you can’t help but recall the old-fashioned recipe for raising children. It calls for gener ous portions of prayer, family worship. Church attendance. But more than eight mil lion children are growing up today without ANY religious training. When the church bells ring on Sunday morning, remember; the future of our nation, the character of our children, is at stake. THE CHURCH FOR ALL . . . ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest (ac tor on earth tor 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 Day Book Sunday Hosea Monday ... Isaiah Tuesday ... Isaiah Wednesd’y Matthew Thursday. . Matthew Friday Luke Saturday... Habakkuk Chapter Verses 7 1-16 40 1-17 40 18-31 13 24-33 13 36-52 13 20-30 3 1-19 Copyright 1956. Keister Adv. Ser ■ice. Strnskurg, Vs. .-ft'7'? College Station’s Own Banking Service College Station State Bank NORTH GATE Central Texas . Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINAWARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS Bryan Communities Since 1909 First State Bank & Trust Co. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation BRYAN MifLr ^unerJ dJo BRYAN, TEXAS 602 West 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1572 Student Publications The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” Bryan Building & Loan Association BRYAN City JNalional Bank Member FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Bryan “A Nutritious Food” Lilly Ice Cream Co. Bryan MELLO CREAM