Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1958)
[The Battalion College Station (Brazos County)', Texas PA’GE 4 Wednesday, April 9, 1958 A&M Chapel Ceremony Unites Sue Mowery, C. D. Scarborough Miss Sue Ellen Mowery of Col lege Station and Cleveland De- Witt Scarborough Jr. of San An tonio were united in marriage Sun day, March 30, in a 5 o’clock even ing ceremony in the A&M Inter- faith Chapel. The double ring rites were sol emnized by Dr. W. H. Andrew,- pastor of the First Baptist Church of Bryan, in a setting of brass candelabra and pink tapers, palms, Easter lilies, and pink daisies. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Irvin C. Mowery of 606 Fairview, College Station, and Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Scarborough Sr. of San Antonio. Given in marriage by her fath er, the bride wore a street-length dress of mauve tissue taffeta, fash ioned with puffed sleeves and a V-neckline embroidered with crys tal beads. A hat of mauve lace with tiny veil complemented her costume. She carried a Bible top ped with a pink orchid surrounded by stephanotis. Attending the bride as maid of honor was her sister, Miss Anita Joye Mowery, who was attired in a pink sheath of embroidered cot ton satin highlighted by a chiffon cummerbund and drapes. She wore a tiny pink hat with veil and carried a nosegay of pink daisies, roses and carnations. George Scarborough of San An tonio served as his brother’s best man and also assisted John Wayne Todd of College Station in light- A&M MENS SHOP 03 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED ing the candles before the cere mony. The bridal party and parents of the newlyweds received guests in the chapel after the ceremony. The couple will make their home in San Antonio. The new Mrs. Scarborough is a member of the class of ’68 at A&M Consolidated High School. The groom attended Thomas Edison High School in San Antonio and is a member of the A&M class of ’57. Social Whirl A full dress rehearsal for Aggie Wives Revue Night will be held promptly at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Memorial Student Center ballroom. Those participating are asked to be at the MSC before 2 if possi ble. Electrical Engineering Wives Club will hold its annual spring picnic at 3 p.m. Saturday in Hen- sel Park. The fee will be 50 cents per person. Those planning to at tend should pay Margie Swearin gen by noon Friday. The faculty is invited. Meinbers whose husbands will graduate in May, July and August of 1958 and January 1959 are re minded that they must pay their dues to be eligible to receive Ph.T. degrees. Fee for this degree is 25 cents. A bridge benefit is planned for Geology Wives from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, April 13, in the Brooks room of the YMCA. Husbands of members are welcome. Refresh ments will be served and prizes awarded. Free babysitting will be provided in the south solarium. Reservations may be made by calling Betty Gray, VI 6-4945. Ad mission is 50 cents per person. A&M Chapel Interfaith Meet , ts To Feature Houston Rabbi Dr. Hyman Judah Schachtel, chief rabbi, Congregation Beth Is rael, Houston, will be presented at 7:30 tonight in the first of a se ries of interfaith forums at the A&M Chapel. Rabbi Schachtel will speak on “The Spiritual Responsibilities of American Citizenship.” His ad dress will be open to the public. The program is being sponsored by the B’nai B’rith Hillel Founda tion, Henry Cohen Interfaith Fel lowship Award. Other prominent speakers of various denominations will follow, J. Gordon Gay, coordinator of re ligious life, said. Dr. Schachtel received his un dergraduate degrees from the Uni versity of Cincinnati in 1928 and his rabbinical degree from the Seminary in 1931. Before coming to Houston in 1943, he served as Rabbi at the West End Synagogue in New York City for 12 years. He has written several books in the field of general and religious education, including “The Real En joyment of Livipg” and “The Life You Want to Live.” His syndicated column, “Enjoy ment of Life,” appears every Sat urday in The Houston Post. Dr. Hyman Judah Schachtel BONDED FORTUNE GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. GP)— The city of Grand Rapids found itself the owner of a Czarist Rus sian government bond when it took over the assets of an old cemetery in 1949. City offcials figured it was worthless. Then Treasurer Simon J. De Boer heard the U.S. govern ment was liquidating American as sets of the pre-revolution Russian regime. De Boer filed a claim and received $1,000, the face value of the bond. He also hopes to collect $891 interest. Mid-Week Services Scheduled By Local Churches Tonight BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES day 3* per word 24 per word each additional day Minimum charge—40^ DEADLINES ■ P.m. day before publication Olaselfled Display 80e per column Inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE (1) 2 sack Jaeger concrete mixer, electric motor driven. (1) double drum Ersted contractors hoist, el ectric motor driven. Can be seen by calling the B.&C.U. Department. Sealed bids will be received in the Office of the Business Manager, College Administration Building, until 10:30 a. m., April 21, 1958. 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. 112t2 Sofa and chair, $30. VI-6-7356. llltfn For sale: A new kitchen to re place your old drab one. Built-in cabinets, appliances to suit you Repainting and redecorating. “Doc tor Fixit” can do the complete job from planning to financing. Noth ing down and up to five years to pay. Call today for a free estimate and discuss your dreams with “Doctor Fixit” at the MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. Phone VI- 6-5711 today. Illt4 100’ x 125’ corner lot with trees, on Aspen Street, College Station. VI 6-6479. 107tfn FEMALE HELP WANTED HOUSEWIVES earn $60 weekly at home. No selling, no telephon ing. Write P. O. Box 8057, Fort Worth 18, Texas. 112tl8 Night-time car hops wanted. Ex perience not necessary. Apply Tri angle Drive-In. 106tfn Something New For A Delicious Treat? —TRY OUR— SPUD SUNDAE And Our Homemade PIZZA PIES The TRIANGLE 3606 So. College Olympia Typewriters Otis McDonald BRYAN BUSINESS MACHINE CO. 429 S. Main • Bryan me anove coupon wortn 55.00 on purchase of any Typewriter . , WORK WANTED Babysitting in your home. 75c hour. VI 6-5947. 112t3 Experienced child care, days and evenings. TA 2-6900, Mrs. Gilbert Dylla, 2116 Cavitt. 112tfn All day nursery. VI 6-6146 after 5. 112tfn Typing, Multilithing, Duplicating reports, manuals, Thesis papers, etc. ZOST THE PRINTER, 115 Walton Drive, Phone VI 6-6128 or VI 6-4874. 108tfn 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 Neat, accurate typist desires typing to do in my home. Own electric typewriter. Call VI 6-5805. FOR RENT Unfurnished two bedroom house, washer connections, fenced back yard. Between Bryan and College. $54 a month. 800 Mitchell St., TA 3-3475. 112t2 Furnished three room, bath, apartment. Close in. Adults. L. G. Beaumont. TA 2-1244. 112t6 Well located, newly decorated, unfurnished two bedroom house adjacent southside campus. VI- 6-5136. Illt3 Available May 8—nice three room and bath completely furnished apartment. 403 Tauber (2 blocks from C.S. Bank). May be seen any afternoon after 5. Drive by or phone VI 6-7248. 109tfn Two bedroom apartment near Crockett School. Available April 1. $75. VI 6-6660. 107tfn Three room apartment. Across street from Southside Grocery. Re decorated. $25. VI 6-6544. 103tfn Two furnished apartments lex cated near campus. Bills paid. Cali VI 6-5427. 82tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tl Furnished apartments $45.00 per month. Utilities paid. 4000 College Main, Aggie Circle Apartments. 65tfn PROMPT RADIO SERVICE — Call — SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND TV SERVICE 713 S. Main St. Tubes Tested Free By Experts PHONE TA 2-1941 BRYAN • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Sprtngrs Road BRYAN, TEXAS / / / > I) # Where the Art of fi I ^hfotard A a f e t e r i a Cooking Is Not Lost g SPECIAL NOTICE The Scribe Shop, Party 112tl3 College Station, Texas Stated meeting Thursday, April 10 at 7 p. m. Annual visit of DISTRICT DEPUTY GRAND MASTER. Also film will be shown of the Texas Masonic Home and School. All Master Masons are urged to attend. E. L. Mayhugh, W.M. Joe Woolket, Sec’y. your rugs and carpets need ing? Home Service Co. has professional knowhow and tment to do the job right. Re- ;. Home owned. All service anteed. Phone VI 6-8269 for Anytime. 108tfn Electrolux Sales and Service. G. . Williams. TA 3-6600. 90tfn Do you need help with your in- 2-6541 tance. competent assis- 4-11 OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed r telephoned so as to arrive In the Offld f Student Publications (Ground Flool MCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daUy onday through Friday) at or before the sadllne of 1 p.m. of the day proceed Ing The Daw Hall Dormitory Council gives On the basis of spring semester grades Dme students will become eligible to order Such student! A&M ring. may now the ring clerk In Their records will lined by April 8, 1958. Orders for will be taken between April 8 to for delivery July 1, 1958. The k is on duty from 8 a. m. to Puesday through Saturday. H. D. Heaton. Director of Admissions and Registrar EARLY BIRD SHOPPE TOGS — GIFTS AND TOYS for Girls and Boys FABRICS — SHOES Ridgecrest Village 3601 Texas Ave. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST SOSA East 26th Call TA 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) To Aggies & Faculty Plan Your Banquets NOW For Spring. Banquet Room With Reservations For 250 Or Less Call TA 2-1353 The TRIANGLE 3606 So. College Ave BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH Theare will be no vesper service this evening, since the pastor is at tending the 36th convention of the Texas District being held at the Lutheran Concordia College in Austin. Walther Leaguers will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. A wiener roast social, to which the newly confirmed are invited, will be held Thursday, April 24. The Zone Rally of the League is scheduled for Sunday, April 20, in Sealy. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Members will meet for prayer and fellowship at 7:30 tonight in the Memorial Student Center. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Canterbury Association will meet at 7:15 tonight. FAITH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Choir rehearsal is scheduled for 8 p. m. today. Brotherhood will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Tonight’s schedule: church work ers supper, 6 p.m.; choir practice, officers and teachers meeting, Sun beam, R. A. and G. A. meetings, 6:30; mid-week prayer meeting, 7:30. A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH Aggie Religious Study Group will meet at 7 this evening in the YMCA. ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL Mass will be celebrated at 5:15 this evening. Rosary and Benedic tion will follow at 7:15. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Mid-week services will be con ducted at 8 tonight. The reading room will be open for an hour pre ceding the services. A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST Tonight’s worship service will begin at 7:15. Ladies Bible class meets at 9:30 a.m. Thursday. BRYAN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Regular mid-week services will be conducted at 7:30 tonight. COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD Prayer meeting begins at 7:30 tonight. mg Requests for room reservations, Memorial Student Center for ma jor event weekends during the 1958-59 school year will be accep ted from students and former stu dents during May, Mrs. Mozelle Holland, guest rooms manager of the MSC said yesterday. Following the May 31 deadline, a drawing will be held to determine who will receive accommodations. After the drawing, notices will be mailed to each person submitting requests for guest room reserva tions indicating whether or not their names were drawn. Names not drawn will be placed on a waiting list and those making the requests will be notified two weeks in advance should a room become available because of a cancella tion. Only one room per family can be reserved each weekend and res ervations are not transferable, Mrs. Holland said. A deposit will be required of those persons receiving a reserva tion no later than two weeks prior to the date reserved. If the de posit is not received before that date, an automatic cancellation wrtl occur, she said. Two P. E. Profs Attend Convention Two members of the staff of the Health and Physical Education Department, attended the national convention of the American Asso ciation for Health, Physical Edu cation and Recreation held in Kan sas City, Mo., March 30-April 3. They were Herman B. Segrest, professor and director of required physical education, and Dr. Carl W. Landiss, professor in charge of health and physical education teacher preparation. During the safety session of the convention, Landiss spoke on the subject “Trends in Driver Educa tion” and seiwed as a panel mem ber in the discussion of general safety and driver education safety. Five thousand or more persons from the United States, Canada, Hawaii and several foreign coun tries attended the convention. Genetics Student Wins Fellowship 9 Robert W. Hamilton Jr., grad uate student in genetics, has been awarded a $3,400 yearly scholar ship, plus all tuitions and fees, to the University of Minnesota for advanced studies in physiology. Hamilton was one of three men to receive such scholarships, de signed to increase the number of medical research scientists. He will receive his M.S. degree in genetics this year. Prior to en tering A&M, he received a B.A. degree in liberal arts from the University of Texas. $5,000 Coal Set In Cancer Drive A door-to-door campaign April 15 will highlight the annual Brazos County Campaign Against Cancer’ underway with a goal of $5,000. A plea for 500 volunteers to as sist in the program was sent out by Tom Mahoney, local chairmaiu for the American Cancer Society drive. Mahoney said some workers who aided last year are already at work, but the added number must be secur-ed before the April 15 drive. Volunteers will work on one of a number of committees which will not only assist in the drive but will also map out complete plans for the campaign. Top Paintings Now Displayed In MSC Twenty paintings of different media and subject matter, four of them prize winner’s, are among the various paintings now being presented in the Creative Arts Committee’s exhibition in the promenade of the Memorial Stu dent Center. The show, a circuit of the Texas Fine Arts Association, will be on display through April 10. For a superbly tangy but mellow casserole, arrange fresh cauliflower flowerlets in buttered baking dish, cover with cooked cubed ham; pout over a shai’p Cheddar cheese sauce, sprinkle with crumbled potato chips and bake until bubbly. TUXEDOS FOR RENT White or Dark Immediate Delivery ZUBIKS CHESTER FI ELD\V ?\ : ^ i MEN OF AMERICA: THE TEST-DRIVER Test cars speeding ' On a hairpin turn! i Four wheels flying! \ I Spinning tires burn! Where the cars are tested, You’ll find a man Stops to take big pleasure When and where he can.. CHESTERFIELD C I 1 Live-action shot—Chrysler Proving Grounds, Chelsea, Michigan. Nothing satisfies like the BIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO BE6ULAB KING