The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 14, 1961, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
Friday, April 14, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 3
)NDAY
URDAI
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Churches Reveal
1 Sunday Services
11 p.m,
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Misses Brown, Jordan, Coffey, Rodriquez
... on campus to extend dance invitation to sophs
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The following is a schedule of
church service for the College Sta
tion area this Sunday:
A&M Church of Christ
Bible school at 9:45 a.m., morn
ing worship at 10:45 a.m., Aggie
class at 6:30 p.m. and evening
worship at 7:15 p.m. The sub
jects. of this week’s sermons will
he “Delivered, Translated and
Transformed” and “Christianity’s
Exhibit ‘A’—Paul.”
A&M Presbyterian Church
The Aggie welcome coffee' at
30 a.m,, Sunday School at 9:45
m., morning worship at 11 a.m.
and leagues at 5 p.m. The topic
of this week’s sermon will be
“Taking Christianity in Earnest.”
A&M Methodist Church
Church school at 9:45 a.m.,
morning worship at 10:55 a.m. and
evening worship at 7 p.m. The
subjects for this week’s sermon
will be “The Good Shepherd” and
“Belief in God.” “Belief in God”
is the second in a series of basic
Christian Beliefs.
St. Thomas’ Chapel
Holy Communion at 8 a.m.,
family service at 9:15 a.m., Church
school at 9:45 a.m., Holy Com
munion and sermon at 11 a.m.,
evening prayer at 7 p.m. and
Young People’s Service League at
7:30 p.m.
Bethel Lutheran Church
Sunday morning worship serv
ices are at 8:15 a.m. and 10:45
a.m. and Sunday School it at 9:30
a.m.
RUN-OFFS
(Continued from Page 1)
rett—252; A1 Weaver—289.
Social secretary: Shelby Traylor
—257; Don Brister—281.
MSG Council: Mundo Riojas—
226; Paul Smith—324.
Yell leader (two candidates
elected): Bill Brashears—358; Tom
Nelson—383; Dudley Griggs—288.
Class of 1964
President: Mike Dodge—398;
Bill Rector—338.
Vice president: Butch Johnson
—321; George Reynolds—400.
Secretary-treasurer: Joel Gold
man—297; Lee Grant—420.
Social secretary: Paul Dresser
—358; Mac Brittain—352.
MSC Council: Harry Christian—
377; Eddie Duncan—335.
TWU Group
Here To Issue
Dance Invite
Scheduled to arrive on the A&M
campus this afternoon is a dele
gation of four TWU sophomores
who will invite A&M sophomores
to an Aggie-Tessie Party Apr. 22
at TWU.
The sophomore class meeting is
slated for 7:15 p.m. in the Chem
istry Building.
The delegates are Kathy Coffey,
class president; Jeanette Brown,
Marilyn Jordan and Judy Rodri
guez. They wall be accompanied
by Mrs. L. M. Ellison, sophomore
dormitory director.
An informal picnic in Houston
Hall courtyard at 6 p.m. Saturday
will open the special activities. The
Student Union Ballroom will set
the stage for a semiformal dance
from 9 to 12 p.m. with music pro
vided by Jerry Cline’s Combo.
Admission will be $1 with pre
party sales at both schools. Tick
ets may be purchased from the
sophomore class officers, officers-
elect and sophomore Student Sen
ate members.
Both Sin Cuidado and Zavalla
housing units at TWU will be open
for the accommodation of Aggies
at $1 per night. Several motels
are also available.
(Continued from Page 1)
dispute, or the Ecuador-Peru and
dispute, to cite a couple) which
weaken our economic make and
make us hate our own people. We
spend innumerable millions of
sorely needed dollars in building
armies to enforce our claims upon
our neighbors.
Today, there is a movement
among the young Latin Americans,
like myself, a movement toward
complete union, not only of ideas,
but of nationalities and economics;
a movement to melt into one big
nation, the Latin American State,
each of the 20 countries which to
day stand apart.
If countries as different ethni
cally and politically as the West
ern European countries could find
basis for a common market, why
can not we, who are of the same
race, the same religion and politi
cal beliefs, do the same?
Just imagine the results of such
union! If we unite the oil from
Venezula, the emeralds of Colom
bia, the bananas of Ecudor, the
coffee of Brazil, the tin of Bolivia,
the meat from Argentina and Uru
guay, the copper from Chile, the
silver from Peru and all the min
eral and agricultural resources of
South America, Central America,
Mexico and the Carribean, this
compact would be of such magni
tude that it would have no prece
dent or comparison.
If we unite, all the millions spent
in armies to defend against each
other would be used in building and
educating our backward country as
a whole. A good example is Costa
Rica, which outlawed the army in
1956, and today they have the
highest percentage of literacy in
Central America, and one of the
highest in the Continent. Costari-
cans are proud of this fact, and
their motto is: “We haye more
teachers and less soldiers than any
country in Central America.”
How about the man-power, the
geographical position and the po
litical effect that such a union
would have? The Latin American
country would dominate the Pacific
and Atlantic Oceans, and it would
separate the world into two parts,
because it would control the ac
cess from one ocean to another.
If all that hate against each
other could be used in helping one
another instead of destroying one
another, this country would be a
paradise, a dream that all Latin
Americans hope to achieve some
day.
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‘Ladies Man’ Entries Grow
Applicants have begun rolling
in by leaps and bounds for the
“Ladies’ Man” contest which fea
tures a prize of a date with the
movie starlet of your choice and
a free vacation in Hollywood, Cal.
Many seem to have hope that
the national contest will host a
natural winner, an Aggie, as
“Ladies’ Man of the Nation” title
holder, shown through lists of en
dorsements brought in by the con
testants.
The main objective of the con
test, which open to all students,
is to get a list of endorsements^
consisting of signatures and I.D.
numbers of endorsers, stating that
“These people feel I should be ac
claimed ‘Ladies’ Mari of the Cam
pus.”
Actual rules for the contest run
as follows:
1. Any student is eligible to
enter the contest. He must come
by The Battalion Office in the
basement of the YMCA Building
and fill out an entry blank before
Tuesday, Apr. 18, at noon.
2. Entrants will then have until
May 2 to submit a list of endorse
ments. An endorsement will con
sist of the printed name, the signa
ture and the identification card
number of any other Aggie. The
candidate with the most endorse
ments wins the right to be known
as the “Ladies’ Man” of the A&M
campus.
3. No student may sign more
than one endorsement.
4. When candidates fill out en
try blanks they must choose, from
pictures, the one girl they would
like to take out if named national
winner.
5. Also required on the form is
various personal information con
cerning the candidate, and a 25-
word or less statement on “Why
I Would Like This Starlet As a
Date.”
6. A panel of judges, headed
by Jerry Lewis, will select the na
tional winner.
7. Members of The Battalion
staff are not eligible fo rthe con
test.
Deadline for entries in the con
test is Tuesday, Apr. 18, so every
one hurry and enter; you might
find yourself at a swank apart
ment in Hollywood soon!
ANAHEIM OR ANCHORAGE
BUFFALO OR BRAZILIA
CHATTANOOGA OR CAIRO
Let Us Get Your
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS
AND TICKETS
Delivered Direct To You
Call TA 2-3784
Robert Halsell Travel Service
1411 Texas Avenue
The Church.. For a Fuller Life. For You..
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
CHAPEL
7:30, 9 :00 & 11:00 A.M.—Sun. Masses
6:30 A.M.—Daily Masses (Mon., Wed.,
Fri., & Sat.)
6:20 P.M.—Daily Masses (Tuesday &
Thursday)
6:30-7:30 P.M.—Confessions Saturday
& before all masses
7:20 P.M.—Rosary & Benediction Wed.
A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH
8:30 A.M Coffee Time
9:45 A.M.—Sunday Sehool
11:00 A.M.—Morning Service*
BETHEL LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
8:10 A.M.—Morning Worship
9:30 A.M.—Church School
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
4:00-5:30 P.M.—Friday School, YMCA
o _/v/v T-. m -L n j __«• - ac Jj
6-
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th East and Coulter, Bryan
8:30 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting
10:00 A.M.—Sunday School
6:30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:15 A.M.—Sunday School
10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship
1:30 P.M.—Evening Service
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
10:01 A.M.—Sunday School
11:61 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
1:30 P.M.—Preaching Service
ST. THOMAS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:15 A.M.—Family Service
11:00 A.M.—Sermon
7:00 P.M.—Evening Prayer
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SOCIETY
9:39 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Sunday Service
8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Service
1:00-4:00 p. m. Tuesdays^Reading
Room
7:00-8:00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
9:15 P.M.—Bible Class
1:15 P.M.—Evening Sendee
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Sendee
1:30 P.M.—Evening Worship
A&M METHODIST CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:65 A.M.—Morning Worship
5:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meeting!
7:00 P.M.—Evening Worship
OUR SAVIOUR’S
LUTHERAN CHURCH
8:16 & 10:46 A.M.—The Church at
Worship
9:30 A.M.—The Church at Study with
Special Bible Discussion
Classes for Aggies
Holy Communion—First Sunday Each
Month
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
9.45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
9:40 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Worship
6:15 P.M.—Training Union
1:15 P.M.—Worship
THE CHURCH FOR ALL. . .
ALL FOR THE CHURCH
The Church is the greatest factor on
earth for the building of character and
good citizenship. It .is a stotehouse of
spiritual values. Without a strong
Church, neither democracy nor civiliza
tion can survive. There arc four sound
reasons why every person should at
tend services regularly and support the
Church. They are: (1) 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.
Day
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Book
Matthew
Psalms
I John
Chapter Verses
luesday Uotm
Wednesday Proverbs
Thursday Ecdosisetes
Friday 1 camuel
Saturday John
18
144
4
14
1
2
15
l-ff
11-12
4-7
1
15-16
1-3
6-8
Three is such a tender age. Sue isn’t a baby
any more, yet she’s a long way from being a
big girl.
When I watched her blowing out the candles
on her cake, I felt a surge of that certain kind
of love reserved for mothers. And, while she
made her wish, I made mine.
I wished, first, that I might be given the
gift of memory, so that I would never 1 forget
a child’s point of view—the importance of even
the littlest promises, the oldest dolls, the small
est nothings.
I wished that I might be given the wisdom
to care for Sue’s body, mind, and soul. And I
was deeply grateful that I had the Church to
help me teach her right from wrong, and to
aid me in endowing her with a rich measure
of faith, of love, and of tolerance toward her
fellow man.
Thinking it over, I guess that my wish for
Sue might be called a prayer. Each Sunday,
in church, I find myself repeating it.
Copyright 1961, Keister Adv. Service, Strasburg, Va.
^Midler itinera( ^J4t
otne
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