The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 16, 1957, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    V'
< r
<
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County}, Texas
PAGE 4 Wednesday, January 16, 1957
Mid-Week Services Planned
■Bethel Lutheran Church
“The Duty of Parents Toward
Their Children” will be the Rev.
William C. Petersen’s sermon topic
for the 7:45 vesper service this
evening. A Walther League social
is planned for 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
St. Thomas Episcopal Chapel
This evening’s Canterbury meet
ing will open with the service of
evening prayer at 7:15 p.m. in the
Chapel. The program, to be held
at 7:30 p.m. in the Parish Hall,
will feature a talk on prayer by
the Rev. Roger Cilley.
A&M Presbyterian Church
Dr. S. M. Gaafar, assistant pro
fessor of veterinary parasitology,
will introduce Westminster Fel
lowship members to the Holy Book
of the Islamic religion, the Ko
ran, at the Fellowship meeting at
7 p.m.
Faith Evangelical and
Reformed Church
College Avenue at Williamson
Drive, Bryan
Junior and senior choirs will
meet for practice at 7 and 8 p.m.
today. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. the
Brotherhood will meet,
in the Brooks room of the YMCA.
Church of the Nazarene
Regular mid-week services will
be conducted at 7:30 this evening.
B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation
“Where Jews Differ” will be the
topic of an address by Rabbi Louis
Trade With LOU,
He’s Right With
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day 3^ per word
2^ per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40^
DEADLINES
5 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80^ per column incb
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR SALE
Station wagon, 1951 eight pas
senger Chevrolet, extra clean. Will
consider trade. VI 6-6488. 216t3
New Spanish guitar nylon
strings. Also solid ranch oak
platform rocker. VI 6-7079. 215t4
(1) Dietert W2, Meter Grating
Spectrograph, (1) Dietert Recter-
fier Unit, (1) Dietert High Vol
tage Spark Unit. May be seen at
the Physics Department. Sealed
bids will be received in the Office
of the Business Manager, College
Administration Building until
10:30 a.m., January 28, 1957. The
right is reserved to reject any and
all bids and to waive any and all
technicalities. Address Business
Manager, A&M College of Texas,
College Station, Texas, for further
information. 215t2
2 lots. Walton & Harrington.
VI 6-7356. 215tfn
Interested in a new car? If so,
save money, call TA 3-6324 after
5 p.m. every day. 215tfn
1953 Olds Holiday. Excellent
condition, 40,000 actual miles,
$1,150.00. VI 6-6401. 215t4
Motor scooter, Cushman, 3-wheel.
123 Meadowland, College Station.
189tfn
Two wheel trailer with side
frames, 7 foot bed, overload
snrings, shock absorbers. $75.00.
See at 1009 Welsh or call VI-
6-5429. 215t3
FEMALE HELP WANTED
A crafts instructor qualified to
teach some or all of the following
—creative ceramics, copper enam
eling, leathercraft, wood carving,
lapidary and silversmithing — will
be needed in the near future at
the Memorial Student Center. Ao-
plicant must know how to fire the
kiln. Contact in person only Mrs.
Adams, Director’s Office, Memor
ial Student Center. 215t4
FOR RENT
Nicely furnished bedroom near
campus—two blocks from North
Gate. Call VI 6-6035. 216t5
LOST
Saturday at North Gate ladies
black calf purse. Contained bill
fold, drivers’ license and other
identification. Reward. Call VI-
6-5446 or 511 Dexter Dr. South,
C.S. 215t2
On campus, January 10, man’s
white gold wedding band. Initials
inside J.A.S. to C.L.P. 12-20-54.
Call TA 3-4075 or contact Clifford
Payne, 1903 % S. College, Bryan.
Reward. 215t4
FOUND
Ladies wrist watch. Owner iden
tify and pay for ad. See Audi’ey
Lindner, Apt. C-7-X College View.
216t3
WORK WANTED
For all types repair and remod
eling call Doctor Fixit at the Mar
ion Pugh Lumber Company. 100%
remodeling loans, no down pay
ments. Phone VI 6-5711. 174tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
ATTENTION WORKING
MOTHERS!
All day nursery $25. per month.
Phone VI 6-4142. 191tfn
VISIT . . .
COULTER FIELD
in Bryan
Highway 21 East
• AIRPLANE RENTAL,
• FLIGHT INSTRUCTION
• RIDES
TA 2-9400
SUE ROSS DODGE, NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
College Station, Texas
jjA Called meeting Thursday.
Jan. 17, 7 p.m. Work in the
tjjgl E.A. degree. Members and
visiting brethren cordially
invited to attend.
L. P. Dulaney, W.M. 216t2
N. M. McGinnis, Sec’y.
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailed,
or telephoned so as to arrive In the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floof
YMCA, VT 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, dalli
Monday through Friday) at or before tin,
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day precedln*
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
Notice To January Graduates
At 8 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, there will
be posted on a bulletin board in the Reg
istrar’s Office a list of those candidates
who have completed all academic require
ments for a degree. Every candidate is
urged to consult this list to determine his
status.
H. Tj. Heaton
Registrar
Firestein of Houston at the cul
tural meeting at 7:15 this evening
. Christian Science Organization
A prayer and fellowship meeting
is scheduled for 7:10 this evening
in the Memorial Student Center.
A&M Christian Church
Old Highway 6 S. of Kyle Field
Aggie Religious. Study Group
will meet at 7 p.rh. at the YMCA.
Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church
Meeting of the Lutheran Stu
dent Association will be held at
7:30 tonight.
College Heights Assembly of God
Mid-week prayer meeting is sche
duled for 7:30 p.m. today.
St. Mary’s Catholic Chapel
Mass is at 5:15 p.m. today, with
benediction at 7:10 and Newman
Club, 7:30 p.m. On Thursday and
Friday Mass will be said at 6:30
a.m.
Wesley Foundation
At 7 this evening the regular
midweek meeting will be held.
Christian Science Society
Evening service is scheduled for
8 p.m. today.
Church of Christ
Mid-week service will begin at
7:15 this evening. Ladies Bible
Class meets at 9:30 a.m. Thursday.
First Baptist Church
Workers supper is at 6 tonight;
teachers meeting, 6:30; choir prac
tice, 6:50, and prayer meeting at
7:30.
Mrs. T. Taylor Named To Head
Garden Club During 1957-58
Mrs. Tom Taylor was elected president for the 1957-58 club year
at the meeting of the A&M Garden Club Friday afternoon.
Serving with her will be Mrs. Edward Baker, first vice president;
Mrs. Stanley Davis, second vice president; Mrs. W. C. Freeman, third
vice president; Mrs. John Perry, recording secretary; Mrs. R. E. Pat
terson, corresponding secretary;-^
Mrs. J. G. McGuire, treasurer;
Mrs. John Ashton, reporter, and
Mrs. Edward Madeley, historian.
The slate of officers was pre
sented by Mrs. George Potter,
chairman of the nominating com
mittee. Before the presentation
of committee reports, the presi
dent, Mrs. Madeley, announced
that the board of directors had ap
pointed Mrs. Carl Williams to serve
as second vice president for the
remainder of the current year.
The meeting was opened with
an Invocation by Mrs. Ran Bos
well. Mrs. Baker told of tentative
plans for a pilgrimage, during the
iris seasop, to Temple and Belton,
with lunch at the Stage Coach Inn
in Salado.
Mrs. .Taylor announced that the
club program in February will be
open to guests, in order that they
may enjoy demonstrations by Mrs.
J. L. Webb of Houston. Mrs. Webb,
an instructor and accredited judge,
will suggest ways to satisfy the
requirements for entries In the ar
rangement classes of the club’s
flower show.
The day’s feature arrangements,
done to the theme “Discovering
America” by Mrs. Ralph Lee and
Mrs. Fred Smith, were presented
by Mrs. Edward Sauer.
Speaker for the afternoon, Mrs.
Stanley Davis, a club member who
is a national judge, used as her
subject “Discovering All About
House Plants.” She sketched the
place of plants in the contempor
ary home and their requirements
for maximum beauty and satisfac
tion.
Mrs. Davis then “judged” sev
eral plants to illustrate points to
remember when making an entry
in the flower show. Stressing
“grooming,” leaf pattern and con
dition, bloom, correct labeling and
the importance of a plain contain
er, she stated that the new, the
rare or the difficult plant to grow
would make the higher rating.
In “Tips for the Toiler,” Mrs.
W. W. Armistead showed a num
ber of pamphlets, available thru
the Agricultural Extension Ser
vice, on gardening methods for
specific plants.
During the social hour Mrs. Tay
lor’ presided at a copper service
at the “Table of the Month,” which
had been arranged b‘y Mrs. Fred
Farrar. Hostesses were the Mes-
dames C. C. Doak, Patterson and
Boswell.
SOCIAL WHIRL
Agricultural Engineering Wives
Club will entertain the department
faculty wives at 7:30 p.m. Monday
in the home of Mrs. Fred Jones,
201 College View. Mrs. Harry
Rankin will give a book review on
“Bears in the KStchen.” All mem
bers are urged to be present and
get acquainted with the faculty
wives.
★
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Crawford
entertained the Mechanical Engi
neering Wives Club in their home
Monday evening with a graduation
party honoring Mrs. Audrey Lind
ner. Mrs. Lindner, the only Jan
uary graduate, was presented the
P.H.T. diploma by Mr. Crawford.
Refreshments of tea sandwiches,
Fritos and dip, cake and coffee
were served, with Mrs. R. M. Win-
gren presiding at the coffee ser
vice.
Jo Ann Garretson and Ann Kin
ney will be hostesses to the reg
ular group of the Aggie Wives
Bridge Club Thursday evening.
Hostesses for the intermediate
group will be Sue Bresie and Jean
Price, and for the beginners, Jean-
ene Stein and Helen Smith.
Prizes were won last week by
Joyce Hanna, Virginia Fereday and
Betty Ann Davis in the regular
group and by Amaryllis Roberts,
Tam Walton and Kathy Biggler,
among the intermediates.
Hostesses were Pat Sprayberry
and Mary Virginia Lyles, Jeanette
Clemens and Shirley Kamm, and
Marilyn Janish and Sandie Hobble.
Aero Wives will meet at 7:30
this evening in the Aero Lounge.
Hostess will be Lida Crubaugh.
New officers for the club are
Helen Miller, president; Janice
Gordon, first vice president; Beth
Wells, second vice president; Alli
son Benthul, secretary; Lida Cru
baugh, treasurer; Helen White, re
porter, and Nancy Bamhouse,
council representative.
★
A P.H.T. dinner honoring Jan
uary graduates will be held at 6:30
this evening in the social room of
the Memorial Student Center by
the Agriculture Economics and
Rural Sociology Wives Club. Wehr-
man’s is catering the affair.
Members of the Agriculture Ed
ucation Wives Club have elected
the following officers for the
spring semester: president, Doris
Purser; vice president, Loretta
Hedrick; secretary-treasurer, Joy
ce Cozart; reporter, Doris Cole
man; parliamentarian, Beverly
Breeland, and representative to the
Aggie Wives Council, Myrna Hen
dricks.
Receiving their P.H.T. degrees
from Prof. O. M. Holt were the
following graduating members:
Frances McCulley, Dawn Gilleland,
Louise McCoy, Wilmfi Jlackfield,
Judy Moody and Paula King. Dr.
Jarrold Gray was present to take
pictures.
To Hear Dr. Anderson
A&M Social Club Slates
Meeting For This Friday
A&M Women’s Social Club will
gather at 3 p. m. Friday in the
ballroom of the Memorial Student
Center for an address by Dr. John
Q. Anderson of the English De
partment and graduate faculties.
This will be the club’s first meet
ing of the new year.
Dr. Anderson, a native of Texas,
received his A. B. degree from
Oklahoma A&M College and, after
serving over five years in the
Army, returned to graduate school
at Louisiana State University,
where he received his master’s
degree in American literature.
He then taught part-time and
did graduate work at the Univer
sity of Texas before going to the
university of North Carolina, where
he completed his Ph. D. in Ameri
can literature.
Before returning to Texas three
years ago, he taught for one year
in Louisiana. Active in several pro
fessional and learned societies, he
is immediate past president of the
Texas Folklore Society, and is now
a councilor, and is chairman of
the Folklore-Linguistic Section of
the South-Central Modern Langu
age Assn.
In keeping with his varied in
terests, Dr. Anderson has published
several articles in journals de-
Readings On New Play
Readings for the Aggie Player’s
cast for “The Skin of Our Teeth”,
by Thornton Wilder, will be held in
the Music Hall Thursday and
Friday at 7:30 p. m., according to
C. K. Esten, director.
voted to literature, history and
folklore.
While searching for material on
a medical doctor whose biography
he is writing, Dr. Anderson came
across an extensive Civil War diary
in Tallulah, La., in 1953.
That manuscript, edited with an
introduction and explanatory notes,
was published by the Louisiana
State University Press in March
1955 as “Brokenburn: The Journal
of Kate Stone, 1861-1868.”
On the day of publication the
town of Tallulah celebrated the
event with a parade of floats de
picting scenes from the book and
the period. Over 10,000 were pre
sent to witness the ceremonies,
during which Miss Amy Holmes,
Kate Stone’s daughter, was pre
sented with the first copy of the
book.
Since its publication, “Broken-
burn” has been very favorably re
viewed in newspapers and maga
zines over the nation, including
Life and The New Yorker. Now
in its second printing, “Broken-
burn” has been ranked with such
other well-known Confederate wo
men’s diaries as Mary Boykin
Chestnut’s “Diary from Dixie.”
Dr. Anderson’s most recent work
in Civil War history is an edition
of the letters of a medical doctor
who served through the Civil War
with a Texas unit. The work is
soon to be published as “A Texas
Surgeon in the C.S.A.” This will
be the topic of Dr. Anderson’s talk
before the Social Club.
The treasurer, Mrs. H. E. Hierth,
will accept club dues at Friday’s
meeting.
A TIP FROM LOU:
BOTANY 101 & 115
ENGLISH 203
Will be good for one semester only. So trade while the
trading is good!
Lou’s Trading Post
x
WHEN THE LUCKIES are gone, you’ve still got the
memory of some great smoking. You’ve also got a
Slack Pack. Chin up, though, you can get more down
at the store—and every Lucky tastes like a million
bucks. That’s because every Lucky is made of fine to
bacco—mild, good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED
to taste even better. Have you tried a Lucky lately?
It’s the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!
f r?
near college. Two room furnished
upstairs apartment near college.
Inquire 403 Jersey, VI 6-5427.
216t3
Furnished bedroom in private
home. Sem i -private bath. TA-
2-4872 between 1 p.b. and 9 p.m.
199tfn
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric
Shop. 98tf
WANTED TO RENT
Small 2 bedroom house near Con
solidated. Call A. Shelton, VI-
6-5910. 214t4
PETS
Dogs, cats boarded—low daily,
weekly, monthly rates. Grooming
Puppies. Free pickup, delivery.
BAYARD KENNELS, Highway 6
South, College. VI 6-5535. 70tf
PROMPT RADIO SERVICE
— Can —
SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND
TV SERVICE
113 8. Main St.
(Aere— from Railroad Tower)
PHONE TA S-1M1 BUT AM
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
Call TA 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
• ENGINEERING AND
AKCHITKUTURAI, SUPPLIES
• BLUE LENS PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
•*> Old SulpAer Spring* Bead
BRIAN, TEXAS
I rof-pf* o/Y/YI/ Q \%7 A
WHAT IS A GERMAN CHEERLEADER?
The Exehitiige Store is lit the market
for your used books
<JuH’Ji onr prices before selling
a Rootin’ Teuton
THE exchange STORE
“Serving Texas Aggies’* -
ROTH HAFER.
FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL
#!
Jk* 4
Join MARCH OF DIMES
IN JANUARY
WHAT IS A SORCERESS’ COZY NOOK!
Witch Niche
LUCILLE SUTTMEIER.
CORNELL
"IT’S
TOASTED''
to taste
better!
disi
cigarettes
WHAT IS AN UNWASHED HOBO?
Fragrant Vagrant
ROBERTA MARGOLIN.
C.C.N.Y.
©A. T. Co,
PRODUCT OF
Luckies
Taste Better
CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER !
STUCK FOR DOUGH?
START STICKLING!
MAKE *25
We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler wa
print—and for hundreds more that
never get used! So start Stickling—
they’re so easy you can think of dozens
in seconds! Sticklers are simple riddles
with two-word rhyming answers. Both
words must have the same number of
syllables. (Don’t do drawings.) Send
’em all with your name, address,
college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky,
Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.
AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES