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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1958)
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Friday, t)ecGmber 12, 1958 PAGE 3 Civilian Picture [Schedule Told For Aggieland Civilian students may have their pictures made for the Apg'ieland ’59 according to the following schedule: Freshmen, sophomores and jun iors with surnames beginning with E-J will be taken Monday and Tuesday; K-N Wednesday and Thursday; 0-S, Monday and Tues day, Dec. 15-1C; and T-Z, Dec. 17- 18. Seniors and graduates students will have their pictures made be ginning Jan. 5-6 with surnames beginning with A-C Jan. 7-8, D- H; Jan. 9-10, I-M; Jan. 12-13, N- Q; Jan. 14-15, R-S; and Jan. 16-17, T-Z. Sam Houston Girls Choir . . . to sing Sunday at 4 in MSC Girls Choir Sings Sunday The Sam Houston State Girls Choir, including 43 feminine voices, will be presented in a special Christmas concert by the Memorial Student Center Music Committee Sunday at 4 p.m. in the MSC Ball- Colleg< ;e to Honor 25-Year Staffers At Christmas Fete Staff members completing 25 years of service this year at A&M will be honored at the annual Christmas dinner here on the night of Dec. 17. Twenty-six honorees will be pre sented with 25-year service pins by Dr. M. T. Harrington, president of the college and system. All staff members of the sys tem employed at College Station and their families are invited to the informal, dinner and program which will be held at Sbisa Hall at 7 p.m. Other interested citi zens of the Bryan-College Station area are invited to attend. ^Lmong the honored guests wilL be all retired members of the sys tem staff residing in this area. The program will include Christ mas music on the organ by Mrs. A. B. Medlen. The Singing Cadets, under the direction of Bill Turner, will also be featured. Following greetings by Presi dent Harrington, the Christmas message will be given by Dr. A. A. Price, dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. A. M. Sorenson of the Departriient of Animal Husbandry, will be the master of ceremonies. Tickets are $1.50 each and can be purchased at the Memorial Stu dent Center, offices of . the deans and department heads of the col lege and at the headquarters of the Agricultural Extension Service, Agricultural Experiment Station, Engineering Extension Service, En gineering Experiment Station and the Texas Forest Service. room. Four Bryan-College Station co eds—Anna Parsons, Margaret Ber- ry, Joyce Horn and Betty Rankin —are members of the choir di rected by Miss Virginia Irvin. “Ceremony of Carols” by Ben jamin Britton, will compose the first part of the program. Special parts will be performed by Bar bara Thaysen, Jimmy Kay Green and Kay Alewine. Accompanist will be Aurelia Smith. Part two of the concert will fea ture traditional Chi'istmas carols, including “Holly and the Ivy,” “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” “Silent Night,” “Away in a Man ger,” “My Heart Rejoices,” “Shep herds Awake” and “Oh Nightin gale.” The choir will also sing “Jingle Bells” with a solo by Alice Ann Chambless. The program will be closed with “Angel Voices,” the ti'aditional LED. Club Holds Party Tonight The Industrial Education Club will have a party tonight at the Brazos County A&M clubhouse according to Wayne Doyle, presi dent of the club. The function is to be a barbecue. There is to be a social hour from 5:30 until 7 p.m. with the meal served at 7. Following the meal, facilities will be available fox- playing cards and dominoes, said Doyle. GI Bill Pay form Signing Scheduled Due to the Chx-istmas holidays, students attending college under the Korean G.I. Bill may sign their payforms for their December checks Monday. Accoi'ding to Robert O. Murx-ay Jr., veterans’ advisox-, these forms must be completed by noon, Jan. 6, in order to be delivei'ed by Jan. 20. (Similar models in stock) A fine example of Early American cabinet design, executed in Genuine Hard Rock Maple and rubbed to a soft satin finish. This console of rare Colonial charm houses the Mathes Dual Channel Stereophonic Hi-Fi record playirxg instruments with FM and AM radio and with Dual Sterephonic systems in a single cabinet. The 4-speed record changer is equipped with a diamond-Sapphire flip- over styli. ^ Speakers—12”-8”-5”, High-Fidelity Dual-Channel Sterophonic Phonograph Priced at $289.95 Full Mahogany Hi-Fi Console with 3 Speakers « only $119.95 JOE FAULK’S FURNITURE Coulter at Cavitt benediction for the choix-’s annual Christmas conceits. Presented as a Music Committee Special Event, there will be no ad mission chai-ge for the program. Chairman of the Special Events Committee is Chax-les Dahl. YMCA Fish Council Has Help Sessions Two sessions on “how to study” have been offered by the Fresh man council of the YMCA during the past two weeks. The sessions, which met in the TV room of the YMCA had as guest speakers Dr. Warx-en C. Bonney, psychologist at the col lege hospital and D. Dee Kutach, counselor of The Basic Division. According to Carl P. Zietlow, associate secretary of the YMCA, thex-e was an appreciable number of students px-esent. Although the discussions were pi'imarily directed towax-d* the freshmen, members of the other classes were invited to attend. Zietlow said that more sessions may be scheduled if jthe previous ones prove to have been helpful and others are desired. Korean Missionary Addresses Wesleys Miss Dorothy Hubbax-d, who re cently returned from teaching in Korea as a three-year missionary spoke Wednesday night at the Wesley Foundation. An article in last night’s Bat talion incorx-ectly said that Miss Hubbard would speak Satuxday night. 34 Staff Members Eye Science Meet Thirty-four staff members of A&M and the college System will participate on the progi'am of the 62nd annual meeting of the Texas Academy of Science in Houston, Dec. 12-13. They are Joe S. Ham, Max C. Bolen, Fx-ank C. Whitmore, J. E. Evex-ett, M. W. Naugle, J. R. Hen derson, J. B. Coon, B. L. Landrum, J. G. Potter, Richard J. Baldauf, Harry D. Thiers, Sidney 0. Brown, George M. Ki*ise, C. M. Williams, Norris P. Wood, Billy D. Webb, Luther R. Richardson and Sanford J. Richey. Also, M. E. Haque, B. L. Reid, M. M. Rahman, J. R. Couch, R. L. Svacha, C. M. Treat, B. N. Smith, W. P. Williams, C. C. Doak, J. R. Lumby, James R. Bradley, Paul Weaver, Omer E. Sperry, John J. Sperry, Thadis W. Box and G. O. Hoffman. Officers of the Texas Academy of Science include the following from A&M: Dr. Howard Gravett, vice-president of the Biological Sciences j Section; Dr. Horace R. Blank, vice-president of the Earth Sciences Section; and Dr. Omer E. Sperry, vice-pi-esklent of the; Conservation Section. Social Whirl Agronomy Wives’ Club Chx-ist- mas dinner will be held Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the Saber Motel Res- taux-ant. A social will follow at the home of Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Trogdon, 4004 Oaklawn, Bryan. Ti'ogdon is head of the Depart ment of Agronomy and Mrs. Trog don is sponsor for the Agronomy Wives Club. FRIENDLY FOLKS NEW CASTLE, Ind. (AP)—A tavex-n owner applying for a liquor license renewal was asked by the county Alcoholic Beverage Board if there were ever any unescox-ted females in his place. “Not for long,” he replied. Rice Talent to Be AuditionedTonight Members of the Memorial Stu dent Center Music Committee will audition talent tonight at Rice Institute for the 1959 Intercol legiate Talent Show to be held here March 13. This will be the second audi tion trip of the year for the group which visited Sam Houston Stge College Wednesday night. In addition to these two trips, the committee will make trips to other colleges in Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma during the next two months. Making the trip tonight will be James Fallin, committee chair man; Johnny Johnson, ITS direc tor and chairman; Art Oswald and Richard Nagy, committee mein- bers; and Rosalie Spencer, MSC student program advisor. Next Edition Due Of Mitchell Paper The second edition of the “Mit chell Monitor” is expected to ap pear sometime this week, said Thomas Sirianni, editor. The Monitor was started Nov. 14, three days after Sirianni was appointed editor by the Mitchell Dormitory Council. 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