The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 18, 1957, Image 4
The Battalion -> College Station {Brazos County), Texas PACS '4 Wednesday, Decethbet IS, 195? Foreign Students Entertained © Sunday At Christmas Party International students at A&M and their wives were entertained Sunday evening at the home of Dr. and Mrs. M. T. Harrington. The affair was the annual Christ mas party sponsored by the Inter national Relations Groups of the American Association of Univer sity Women and the Campus Study Club. Assisting Dr. and Mrs. Harring ton in greeting guests was Mrs. Robert Bosslei% chairman of the AAUW group. Mrs. John Calhoun and Dr. Meta Brown registered the guests. Under the direction of Bill Turn- DALLAS CHRISTMAS DANCE All Ags Invited Statler - Hilton Friday, Dec. 27 5:00 p. m. 12:00 p. m. $5.00 Per Couple Cokes Included er and Joe Woolket, with Mrs. A. B. Medlen at the organ, the group enjoyed Christmas caroling. A quartet from the Singing Cadets also sang several selections. Dr. John Q. Anderson of the A&M English Department and a past president of the Texas Folk lore Society entertained the guests with folk songs to his guitar ac companiment. Refreshments of hot spiced punch and coconut balls were served from a table overlaid with a red net Christmas cloth and centered with an arrangement of holly and red tapers. Mrs. Gordon Gay, Mrs. Jack Gray, Mrs. Bennie Zinn and Mrs. D. W. Williams presided at the tea table. Members on the planning com mittee were Mrs. W. H. Ritchey, decorations; Mrs. W. L. Russell and Mrs. John Ashton, refresh ments; Mi’s. Fred Smith, program; Mrs. Horace Blank and Mrs. John Calhoun, hospitality. Industrial Engineering Wives Club officers for the spring semes ter are Virginia Eason, president; Bennett Ruiz, vice president; Jo Ann Garretson, secretary; Ann Mc- Elroy, treasurer; Dot Porter, re porter; Ruth Erwin, Aggie Wives Council representative; and Ditsy Bailey, historian. & ITS A RADIO! HEAREVER RADIO £ No Tubes 9 No Batteries % No Transistors 0 No Electricity for $4.75 TOY HOUSE 409 N. College, Bryan TA 2-1445 m Local Ch u rch es WillConduct Mid-Week Services Tonight ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL Knights of Columbus will have a bunco party for members and guests at 7:30 tonight in the Stu dent Center. All who attend are asked to bring “white elephant” gifts not costing more than 25 cents for prizes. All Knights are urged to attend as his will be the Christmas get- together for new and old members. A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH All members and friends of the congregation are invited to attend the annual Christmas play at 6:30 tonight at the church. The Yakima Indian version of the Christmas story will be pre sented by the Sunday School, fol lowed by a visit from St. Nick. “The Nativity,” a cantata, will be presented for the public at 8 p. m. at the All Faith Chapel on campus. There will be no admission charge. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Canterbury Association’s annual Christmas party and steak fry will be held at 6:30 p. m. today in Hen- sel Park. Admission will be by ticket only. Gordon Gay, general secretary of the YMCA, is in charge of the steak fry, which will be followed by a floor} show. A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST Worship service will be conducted at 7:15 this evening. Ladies Bible Class meets at 9:30 a. m. Thursday. Aggies Are Known To Help Their Own Any Aggie can make an emer gency loan from Lou without any security or interest. At the present Lou has over $2,000.00 out in loans, many of which were made early in the semester and are now past due. If you have borrowed from Lou and can’t repay him now, just keep on trading with Lou but drop by and tell hirr< when you can re pay him. Since Lou can’t make any more loans until some loans are repaid, try to help your buddies by repay ing Lou now if you can. Lou appreciates the opportunity to help your buddies? Advertisement TRADE WITH LOU ‘Most Aggies Do” BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day :ty per word per word each additional day Minimum charge—40d DEADUNES 6 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80^ per column Inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6418 WORK WANTED Have room for more children. Weaver’s Kiddie-Land Nursery, 225 Lynn Dr., Bryan, TA 2-6076. OOtfn Have a report to turn in ? Bi-City Secretarial Service has new electric typewriters, professional typists, knowhow and interest in your work. 3408-A Texas Avenue. VI 6-5786. 59tfn Typing and Lithographing our Specialty. Executive type gives re ports, thesis, lab manuals, etc., that professional look. ZOST THE PRINTER, 115 Walton Dr. (East Gate), Phone VI 6-6128 or VI 6-4874. 33tfn FOR RENT campus. Stove and refrigerator fur nished. $55, bills unpaid. Mrs. Marion Pugh, VI 6-6638. 57tfn month. Utilities paid. 4000 College Main, Aggie Circle Apartments. 55tfn Four room furnished apartment, water and gas furinshed. Sc 2108 Cavitt Drive, Bryan. J Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tf OFFICIAL NOTICES Neat, accurate typist desires typing to do in my home. Own electric typewriter. Call VI 6-5805. Day nursery for working moth ers. Call Mrs. Redding, VI 6-4892. 271tfn Kitchen remodeling, cupboard work, interior painting. VI 6-7265. 258tfn PROMPT RADIO SERVICE — Call — SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND TV SERVICE 713 S. Main St. (Across from Railroad Tower) PHONE TA 2-1941 BRYAN EARLY BIRD SHOPPE TOGS — GIFTS AND TOYS for Girls and Boys FABRICS — SHOES Ridgecrest Village 3601 Texas Aye. • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • .BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 803 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS Official notices must be brought, mailed, or telephoned so as to arrive In the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, dally Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day proceeding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Regalia for the Baccalaureate-Commencement Exercise All students who are candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy are required to order hoods as well as the doctor’s cap and gown, and to leave the hoods with the Registrar no later than 1 p. m. Tues day, Jan. 14. The Ph.D. hoods will not be worn in the procession since all sucl didates will be hooded on the stage. are candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree, except military students, will wear the bachelor’s cap and gown. All Mllita students who are candidates for degrt will wear appropriate military uniforms. follows: doctor’s cap and same as that for cap and gown. C. E. Tishler, Chairman Convocations Committee Business Machines & Typewriters Pickup & Delivery Day or Night Davis Office Equipment Co. P. O. Box 95 College Station, Texas R. L. (Bob) Davis ’50 VI 6-6533 l If , g /? 0 , . Where the Art of ^Motardd Cafeteria Cooking Is Not Lost CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Mid-week services will begin at 8 tonight. The reading room will be open for an hour preceding the services. BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH Tonight’s vespers will begin at 7:45. The Walter League Christmas party is scheduled for 7:30 p. m. Thursday. WESTMINSTER STUDENT FELLOWSHIP Robert Coffman will speak on “The Church in International Rela tions: Its Successes and Failures” at 7 tonight at the A&M Presbyter ian Church. Caroling to shut-ins in the community will follow. COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD Prayer meeting is at 7:30 tonight. BRYAN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Regular mid-week services will be held at 7:30 this evening. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Church workers’ supper will be held at 6 tonight, followed by choir practice, officers’ and teachers’ meeting, and Sunbeam, R.A. and G.A. meetings at 6:30./ Prayer meeting begins at 7:30. Baytown Key Club Speaks to Kiwanis “There is no limit to what a man can do if he does not care who gets credit for it.” This is the theme of Baytown’s Robert E. Lee High School Key Club who presented a program on their work for local Kiwanians yes terday. James Rhodes, president of the Key Club, told Kiwanis members that his club was a service organi zation similar to Kiwanis, except it was serving in a high school capacity. The Key Club was organized 30 years ago as an organization de signed primarily to combat juve nile delinquency, he said. The club strives to do this by taking the leaders, or “key”, boys and placing them in the club, to set a good example for followers. There are about 30,000 boys in the U.S. and Canada who currently belong to the club, Rhodes said. He said the club did not strive for large membership but rather a small membership of good leaders. The reason for this, he explained, was that smaller groups work to gether more easily than does a large body. He cited his own club as an ex ample. The Baytown school has an enrollment of about 2,000 but only 37 select boys belong to the Key Club, he said. Three other members of the club also gave short talks, including ex amples of the club’s projects and services. Besides doing work in the school, they often work as co sponsors on projects with the Bay- town Kiwanis Club, and help pro mote safety drives, Scott Mann, a club member, told the local Kiwan ians. Don Hicks and Tommy Rhodes were the other two Key Clubbers here from Baytown. Also guests of the Kiwanis Club were members of the national champion poultry judgers from A&M. They are Kendrick A. Hol- leman, David Behlen, Clint Her ring, Carl Armstrong and E. D. Parnell (team coach). Another highlight of the pro gram was the presentation of a charter for Explorer Scout Squad ron 12 to Kiwanis President John Longly by J. G. Potter. Baker Promoted T. H. Baker III, editor of the Battalion in 1955, is now employed as make-up editor of the Garland Daily News after serving two years with the ,/Ur Force in Japan. Oceanographers To iiear Defat ° mger £> Dr. Peter Dehlinger will address the meeting of the A&M Oceano graphic Society at 8:15 p.m. Wed nesday in room 3B of the Memorial Student Center. Dehlinger, associate professor of geology, will speak on “The Crus tal Straucture of the Gulf of Mex ico as Derived from Geophysical Data and Its Relation to the Crus tal Structure of Surrounding Reg ions.” All interested persons are in vited to attend. CATERING 7 Special! Occa&ionA OUTFIT PARTIES CLUB BANQUETS MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5089 200 Congress TA 3-4375 The Watch You'll Give.., or wear with Pride.., Top: 14K gold, 18K gold applied dial figures $120 Below: 14K gold, 18K gold ap plied dial,sweep-second , hand $125 Prices include Federal Tax OMEGA 11 As jewelers of long standing, we are asked to handle any number of products. But we are forced to be extremely selective and to base our decisions on fact. That’s why we choose and recommend Omega. It is the number one name in the fine watch field. Painstakingly produced...superbly styled...winner of the highest awards for accuracy at the world’* leading observatories... Omega represents our greatest watch value. JMay we show you our Omega selection T 1MARTY JEWELERS North Gate FOR SALE Unusual Christmas gifts from England, India, Orient and Italy for the entire family. Displayed in my home, 607-B Foch, VI 6-5603. G6t2 Used Maytag wringer washing machine. Any reasonable offer ac cepted. 4324 Maywood Dr. 65t4 Delicious Smoked Turkeys Give Mother a treat ... no cooking:, ready to serve. Ideal for Christmas gifts. We ship and Christmas wrap. .. POULTRY SCIENCE CLUB A&M Poultry Plant $1.00 per pound plus postage Unfurnished three bedroom house located at 2504 South College. 64tfn IF YOU GOTTA GO, WHY NOT GO FIRST CLASS ? An insurance policy for any size halo.. . Eugene Rush, North Gate. 28tfn SPECIAL NOTICE If you have repair or remodeling problems why bother with a painter here, a carpenter there, when DOC TOR FIXIT can handle the entire case for you. He is reasonable and efficient. Call DOCTOR FIXIT at the MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. for a free estimate and 100% repair loan. 65t4 NOTICE We now have banquet facilities to accommodate 250 people. TRIANGLE RESTAURANT TA 2-1352 or TA 2-1353 3606 S. College Ave. MOVING—local and long dis tance. Packing and crating. Towne Services, TA 2-8824. 38 tfn Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th Call TA 2-1662 for Appointment (Acroes from Court House) ‘He gets a lot to like—filter, flavor, flip-top box."The works. A filter that means business. An easy draw that’s all flavor. And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes. (MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A PRIZED RECIPE)