The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 10, 1959, Image 4

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PAGE 4
Friday, April 10, 1959
Churches Annouce Plans
For Sunday Services, Talks
St. Thomas’ Chapel
Communion will be held at the
8 a.m. service Sunday with a
family worship at 9:15 a.m.
Church school follows at 9:45 a.m.
The Rev. William R. Oxley will
present a dialogue on “Wrath”
from a series bn the “Seven Dead
ly Sins” at both services.
Bethel Lutheran Church
“Jesus’ Appearance to Mary
Magelen” will be the sermon
subject at both the 8:15 and 10:45
a.m. services. Sunday School and
Bible Classes will be conducted at
9:30 a.m.
Unitarian Fellowship
Chester L. Miller, president of
the Unitarian Fellowship of Gal
veston County, will be the guest
speaker at the Unitarian meeting
of the Brazos County group Sun
day evening at 7 p.m. He has chos
en the topic “Mankind Must Come
CIVILIANS
(Continued from Page 1)
Council not being present.
The most encouraging "word
came in a letter from Bennie A.
Zinn. Zinn said in the letter that
the Civilian Weekend was a “job
well done.” He commented on the
general conduct of the students
present and said he heard “nothing
but good praise” from guests at
the dance.
In other business the councilmen
discussed the .nearing leadership
retreat for Civilian student lead
ers. The meeting will be at Bas
trop State Pfcrk, May 1-2.
Purpose of the retreat is to dis
cuss Civilian Student government
problems and ways to improve
dormitory programs.
Panel discussions and group dis
cussions will discuss topics con
cerning responsibilities of leader
ship and other “leader training”
subjects.
“I think we have some good ideas
worked up for the retreat,” Roland
Dommert, Walton Hall represent
ative, said.
Civilian government financing,
dormitory awards and the out
standing councilman award were
discussed before the meeting
closed.
BASEBALL CAPS
Maroon & White &
Other Colors
LOUPOT’S
Doak Heads
Newly-Formed
YMCA Board
Dr. C. C. Doak, head of the De
partment of Biology, has been se
lected chairman of the newly-
formed YMCA Advisory Board.
Others on the board beside Doak
include Dr. L. K. Nelson, College
Hospital; the Rev. Charles Work
man of the A&M Presbyterian
Church; the Rev. James B. Argue,
pastor of the A&M Methodist
Church; Dr. P. J. Woods, Depart
ment of History and Government;
and Dr. Harrison H. Hierth, De
partment of English.
Bill Shenkir is new president of
the YMCA for the coming year.
Other officers include James
Wolfe, vice president; Roger Rat
liff and James Crouch, secretary-
treasurer; David Wallace, ' pro
gram chairman; Paul Van Nieu-
wenhuize, reporter; Bob Compton,
senior representative; Billy Phil
lips, junior representative; and
George Staples, sophomore repre
sentative.
33 QUALIFYING SECTIONS
FOR AMATEURS
SAN FRANCISCO <A>)_Thirty-
three qualifying sections will be
held in connection with the 1958
U. S. Amateur golf championship.
The tournament proper is set for
Sept. 8-13, at the Olympic Country
Club’s Lake course here.
Entries close Aug. 7 with the
United States Golf Assn, in New
York. Amateurs with a handicap
of four strokes or less are eligible
for the qualifying rounds which
begin Aug. 25.
The 1957 crown went to Hillman
Robbins Jr., of Memphis who beat
Dr. Frank M. Taylor of Pomona,
Calif., 5 and 4, at Brookline, Mass.
U* S. Civil Service will inter
view ACCOUNTING, CHEMIS
TRY, MATH, PHYSICS, AERO,
ChE, CE, EE, GEOLOGY, lEd,
lEng, ME, PetE and ARCHITEC
TURE majors for career oppor
tunities.
Texas Electric will interview
CE, EE, and ME majors for
spots in engineering.
About 30 people in the United
States die each year from rattle
snake bites.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
xne day 3* per word
2^ per word each additional day
Minimum charge—104
ES
DBA dew:
# p. m. day before
pu
Classified Display
801 per column Inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6418
bllcatlon
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailed
W telephone -
»f Student
telephoned so as to arrive In the Offic«
Publications (Ground Elool
VMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceeding
publication — Director of Studei
Hons.
FOR SALE
Drawing boards, 18 x 24 inches, are
available at $1 each. May be seen in the
basement of Coke Building. 99tl
FOR
outside
FIXIT” can install asbestos siding 1
typical home for as little as $14.55 pe:
month with nothing down and up to fivi
years to pay on an F.H.A. Insured Title
I Loan. Call today for a free estimate on
your home. And the work is guaranteed
by MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. Phone
VI 6-5711 today and ask for “DOCTOR
FIXIT.”
96t4
;nt Publlca-
1950 Ford at reasonable price. See at
J. C. Sides Texaco Station across fn
Triangle.
om
96t4
On the basis of the spring semester pre
liminary grades some students will be
come eligible to order an A. and M. ring.
Such students may now leave their names
with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s
Office. Their records will be checked and
eligibility for the ring will be determined
by April 14, 1959. Orders for the ring
will be taken between April 14th to June
1st for delivery July 1st, 1959. The Ring
Clerk is on duty from 8 :00 a. m. to 12:00
noon Tuesday through Saturday.
H. L. Heaton, Director of
Admissions and Registrar
92t8
WORK WANTED
Experienced colored woman wants work
five days week. TA 2-4416. 93t7
TYPING WANTED. 15 years experience.
;asonable rates. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Small house near campus. 413 Eisen
hower. VI 6-5078 after 5 p. m. 96t4
Two bedroom home, located near cam
pus, call VI 6-5390. 93t7
1949 Ford. $100. VI 6-8383.
4500 CFM Alpine evaporative cooler. $85.
Call VI 6-6062. 93tfn
STUDENT DIRECTORIES .... $1.00.
OFFICE OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS,
YMCA, BASEMENT. 61tfn
Mufflers, tail pipes and dual sets.
Wholesale prices. WHITE’S AUTO
STORE, 216 N. Bryan. 41tfn
Reasonable
Call TA 2-4812.
Texas’ leading life Insurance company
has a special plan for senior Aggies. See
Rugene Rush at North Gate for details.
22tfn
80tfn
HELP WANTED
Your reports will be
ely
typed quickly and
riters at the
3408A
Texas
71tfn
Waitress. Six days weekly. Student’s
ife preferred. Apply at
wife pref'erre
GRILL, North Gate.
SMITTY’S
99t3
TYPEWRITERS
Rental - Sales - Service
Distributors For:
Royal and Olivetti Typewriters
Olivetti & Odhner Calculators & Adding
Machines
CATES TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
EARLY BIRD
SHOPPE
TOGS — GIFTS AND TOYS
for Girls and Boys
FABRICS — SHOES
Ridgecrest Village 3601 Texaa Aye.
DR. M. W. DEASON
Optometrist
Contact Lenses
Hours — 9:00 to 5:30
Evenings by Appointment
214 No. Main TA 2-3530
You Can Have The Best
FRIEDRICH
Window Air Conditioner
JOE FAULK ’32
Auto & Appliance Furniture
214 N. Bryan. Cavitt at Coulter
| J4otard A
p . , Where the Art of
C- ape ten a Cooking Is Not Lost
FOR RENT
JUNE 1. FIVE ROOM UNFURNISHED
Q^TCX-m - t* -i n tt; V 1 j -yyr 1
ing
HOUSE.' 613 Highland. 220 wiring. Wash
ing machine connections. Fenced-in
coi
yard. Reasonable rent. OUR HOME FOR
SUM!
ms.
washing machine. VI 6-4052.
Reason
THE SUMMER. 715 Park Place. Near
A&M campus. 2 air conditioners, TV,
97AltWF!
One bedroom furnished apartment. Clean
and appreciate tenant who likes a nice
place to live. 2108 Maloney. TA 3-4620.
Duplex apartment, unfurnished $33,
furnished $44. House, unfurnished $33,
furnished $38. VI 6-7334. 93t7
Unfurnished three room duplex on Boy-
ett St. Two blocks north of < Campus
Theatre. Inquire 807 Dellwood in Bryan
or call TA 3-3380. 83tfn
Small furnished apartment. Only $47.50
with bills paid. Walking distance. Couple
only. See Ken Dyson, 401 Jersey. 61tfn
Small furnished house. Nice and neat.
Walking distance. Fine
graduate
See Ken
uate student. Only $42.50.
Dyson, 401 Jersey.
ouple or
No bills.
61tfn
Bedroom with kitchen privileges. VI 6-
5334. 52tfn
Sewing machines. Pruitt Fabric Shop.
98tfi,
Unfurnisned garage apartment. Between
Bryan and College. Attic fan. $50. VI 6-
7331. lOtfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Register your child in WEE AGGIE-
LAND kindergarten under experienced and
qualified teachers. Visit by appointment.
Limited enrollment. VI 6-4052. 97AltWF
Plastic binding service for thesis, re
ports, papers, etc. AGGIELAND STUDIO.
72tfn
Let me
hour, day or
and bring the
keep your children for you by
Will pic" "
ne. VI 6-5505.
them up
63tfn
Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C
Williams. TA 3-6600. SOtfr
RADIO—PHONO—TY
Service
By
SOSOLIK
TUBES TESTED FREE BY EXPERTS
713 S. Main TA 2-194] Bryan
1 • ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
I • BLUE LINE PRINTS
\ • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
•03 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN,TEXAS
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
to Brothehood: the Choice Is
Now.” Services will be in the
YMCA.
A&M Methodist Church
Two Pakistanian students, Mu
hammad M. Ali and Mansur A.
Barker, will speak to Methodist
students Sunday evening following
a supper at the A&M Wesley
Foundation at 5 p.m. Sunday
morning topic for the 10:55 a.m.
service will be “A Gentleman and
a Scholar” by Edgar Godspeed.
Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church
Intern Paul Brossia will speak
on the topic “The Good Shepherd
and His Flock” at the Sunday
morning worship. The Luther
League will meet Sunday evening
for a special program on Stew
ardship with Ora Lee Ramsey and
Jimmy Willman presenting the
program.
A&M Church of Christ
“The Church and Its Liberties”
will be the Sunday morning sei’-
mon topic. The Sunday evening
talk will be on “The Ninth Com
mandant.”
Minnesota Prof
Here Next Week
Dr. W. M. Cochrane
. . visits Ag. Eco. classes
Yemen, a tiny nation on the
southwest border of Saudi Arabia,
has skyscrapers although the
buildings are only a few stories
high. But, each building is atop
mountain ridges about two miles
high.
Dr. Willard W. Cochran, profes
sor at the University of Minnesota
and president-elect of the Ameri
can Farm Economics Assn., will
be “visiting professor” in the De
partment of Agricultural Econom
ics and Sociology, Sunday through
Thursday.
In addition to holding seminars
in the Department of Agricultural
Economics and Sociology, Coch
rane will lecture on “A Balanced
Farm Program for Agriculture”
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Room 231,
new wing of the Chemistry Build
ing. The lecture is sponsored by
the Graduate School and will be
open to the general public.
Cochrane, a native of California,
received his B.S. degree from the
University of California, M.S. de
gree from Montana State College,
and Ph.D. from Harvard Univer
sity in agricultural economics. Af
ter service in the Navy, he worked
in various capacities for the United
States Department of Agriculture,
War Food Administration and the
Food and Agricultural Organiza
tion. He was professor of agri
cultural economics at Pennsylvania
State College from 1948 to 1951
and has been at the University of
Minnesota since 1952. Cochrane
is currently on leave from Minne
sota, serving as visiting professor
at the University of Chicago.
Although he has worked on a
wide range of problems, Cochrane
is best known for his teaching and
research work in agricultural pol
icy, consumer and food economics
and agricultural prices. He is au
thor of several books in the agri
cultural policy field and of nu
merous research publications and
professional journal articles.
A CROW HAZARD
RUIDOSO, N. M. LP)—Most golf
courses have sand traps. Some
have water hazards.
Cree Meadows at this mountain
resort town has a crow hazard.
“You get a beautiful drive down
the fairway,” says Bill Keyes, “and
bingo, here comes a crow; picks
up the ball and away he goes.”
Ed Amonett of Roswell, N. M.,
estimates he has lost about $1,000
worth of balls to the crows in the
last year, says Keyes.
What’s to be done about it?
Not much. The course lies on
the edge of the Mescalero Apache
Indian reservation and you not only
must have a regular hunting li
cense, you have to have one from
the Indians to take a shot at the
golf ball bandits.
No Waiting
IIOTARD’S
Cafeteria
11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.—5 p. m. - 8:30 p.m.
Social Whirl
Monday
Aggie Wives Council will meet
at 7 p.m. in Room 3D of the Me
morial Student Center.
Industrial Engineering Wives
Club meets at 7:30 in the Cabi
net Room of the YMCA. Scott
Poage of the Industrial Educa
tion Department will speak.
Tuesday
Fifth Battalion Wives Club
will meet at 7:30 in the home of
Linda Hillen, 4303 Milam, Bryan,
for a home interior party.
Petroleum Engineering Wives
Club meets at 7:45 in the Cash-
ion Room of the YMCA. The
program will be a choral group,
“The Three Fours.”
University Dames Club will
meet at 8 p. m. at the Kraft
Homestead House for a talk by
Kraft on selection of furniture.
‘Beatnik’ Talk
Tonight in YMCA
Charles R. Humphrey, instructor
in the Department of English, will
talk on “Beatniks” in the YMCA
tonight at 7:30.
The meeting is open to all in
terested students.
The Church.. For a Fuller Life. For You..
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH
8:30 A.M.—Coffee Tim©
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning: Services
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
9:40 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Worship
6:15 P.M.—Training: Union
9:15 P.M.—W'orshlp
BETHEL LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
8:15 A.M.—Morning: Worship
9:30 A.M.—Church School
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
10:00 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7:30 P.M.—Preaching Service
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th East and Coulter, Bryan
8:45 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting
10:00 A.M.—Sunday School
7:00 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SOCIETY
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Sunday Service
2:00-4:00 p. m. Tuesdays—Reading
Room
OUR SAVIOUR’S
LUTHERAN CHURCH
9:30 A.M.—Church School
8:15 & 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
A&M METHODIST CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship
4:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meetings
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
CHAPEL
7:30 9:00 11:00 A^SB$Sunday Masses
6:15 P. M.—Tuesda^y and Thursday
Mass
6:30 A. M.—Other Weekday Masses
6:30, 7:30 P.M,—Saturday Confessions
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7:30 P.M.—Evening Worship
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:15 A.M.—Sunday School
10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:30 P.M.—Evening Service
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
10:00 A.M.—Adult Forum and Church
School, YMCA
7:45 P.M.—First, third and fifth Sun
days, In YMCA Cabinet
room
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:15 P.M.—Bible Class
7:15 P.M.—Evening Service
ST. THOMAS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:15 A.M.—Church School
9:15 A.M.—Morning prayer and
sermon
11:00 A.M.—Morning prayer and
sermon
7:00 P.M.—Evening prayer
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
9.45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Worship
:
■
Wm
PUM
Jm.
The Church is the grealcst factor on
earth for 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 support the Church. They
are: (I) 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 material support. Plan to go
to church regularly and read your Bible
daily.
Milker Duneral Mo
BRYAN, TEXAS
602 West 26th St.
PHONE TA 2-1572
Jpys* l
fej
Dairy Products
Milk—Ice Creow
TA 2-3768
Day Book Chapter Verses
Sunday I Samuel 7 1-17
Monday Revelation 2 1-17
Tuesday Revelation 2 18
Wednesday Revelation 3 7-22
1 Samuel 8 1-22
Thursday
Friday
day I Samuel 12 1-19
Friday I Samuel 9 1-14
Saturda
We have all seen it! That sudden transition from
tears to a smile as a child reappraises the situation.
Do we, when we grow up, lose that ability to
emerge quickly and completely from every crisis?
Probably not! But our thinking processes become
more complex . . . consequently slower. It takes us
sometimes days, weeks, even years, to reappraise a
situation.
But, significantly, one of the common effects of
religious faith in the life of an individual is a marked
increase in the ability to understand a crisis and
emerge from it happily. Those who are conscious of
the power and love of God seem to have an immediate
source of courage and hope.
Observing this fact, the careless man thinks of
the Church as a refuge in time of crisis. The thought
ful family makes worship and church school part of
every week, knowing that the spiritual insights gained
each Sunday will shrink every crisis . . . conquer every
fear.
Copyright 1959, Keister Adv. Service. Strasburg, Va.
Campus
and
Circle
Theatres
College Station
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
College Station
State Bank
NORTH GATE
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
B RYAN
• HARDWARE
• CHINA WARE
• CRYSTAL
• GIFTS
Bryan Communities Since
1909
First State Bank
& Trust Co.
Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
BRYAN
The
Exchange
Store
‘Serving Texas Aggies”
Bryan Building
City National
& Loan
Bank
Member
Association
FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION
B RYAN
Bryan
Mf.
ICE CREAM
"A Nutritious Food"