The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1956 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 15 x 11 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Page 4
THE REDBIRD
Club Activities
ME Club
On Tuesday, Oct. 23 the
Mechanical Engineers
will make afield trip to
Mabry Foundry Company,
Beaumont. Tney plan to
leave the campus at 1 pjn.
Approximately 40 mem-
bets are expected to make
the trip. Non-members of
the club are invited to in-
dicate their desire to go
by signing the list appear-
ing on the ME bulletin
board.
Secretarial Club
A "f i r s t" on the Lamar
Tech campus is the organ-
ization of a professional
secretaries' seminar,
sponsored by the National
Office Management Ass-
ociation and conducted by
Dr. Richard W. Setzer,
Dean of the School of Bu-
siness, and M rs. Norma
Hall, head of the Secre-
tarial Science department.
The seminar promises a
rich and varied course
content, serving as pre-
paration for the CPS exa-
mination, and improve-
ment of the individual pro-
f e s s i onal status to meet
the needs for top-level
secretarial positions.
Speakers for Oct. 23 will
be Mrs. Marjorie Knight
of Lun Oil Corporation and
Mrs .Frankie Triebel .sec-
retary for Moore, Nelson,
Strong, Pipkin, Attorneys-
at-Law. Mrs. Knight and
Mrs. Triebel are me only
two area businesswomen
to be certif ied profess -
ional secretaries.
October 19, 1956
Rho Gamma Sigma
For the third consecu-
tive year, the Rogues have
opened their pie booth at
the Southeast Texas State
Fair Grounds.
At the booth, home-made
pie is served at 20 cents
a slice and coffee at 10
cents a cup. For a $1.00
you can take home a pie.
The proceeds will be
used to finance the annual
King's Ball in February.
Pre-Med Club
O f f i c e rs chosen by the
Pre-Med club for the 1956-
57 school term are: Glen
Lacy, president; Charles
S c h m i stria, vice-presi-
dent; Timmy Brown, secre-
tary; Patricia Brew, treas-
ure r; and Betty Fertitta,
reporter.
CONSIDER
s mm
■l fwAY
SEPARATION
of Church and State...
has never meant separa-
tion of religion and educa-
tion. Look at it this way--
your religion is whatever
you hold most ultimate and
in your life and it is the
choices and decisions you
make as a c o n s e quence.
The very curriculum you
choose is all wrapped up
in your religion.
If you worship money and
security, you;d best pre-
pare yourself to make
money and get security.
You;d better be ready to
turn to them for the an-
swers to the questions
"Who am I?”, "Where did
I come from?", "Where am
I going?". The more
thoughtful person sees
right away that shrouds
don't have pockets.
If science is your God
try checking your history.
You'll find out that science
didn't get a foothold until
men lost their fear of na-
ture. And men didn't lose
their fear of nature until
God became Man- -until
Jesus Christ took all of
creation (men i n c 1 u d ed)
and gave it purpose and
meaning ana direction.
Whate v e r you hold ulti-
mate and intimate had bet-
ter be Absolute and True
and Good, with no strings
attached, or else you're
wasting your time—and it
better have a few workini
solutions you can live win
when the chips are down—
when life and loss of free-
dom are threatened. This
is a time when neither the
test tube nor the Treasury
Bond (both good, but neith-
er God) help very much.
Find out about this kind of
Faith at the Episcopal In-
quirer's Class each Wed-
nesday night at 8—Canter-
bury House.
The pre-meds are join-
ing with the engineers in
sponsoringBettyJean Fer-
titta as their candidate for
homecoming queen.
The organization is cur-
re ntly discussing plans
forpromotingtheir home-
coming queen candidate
and for their annual
spring trip to the medi-
cal center at Galveston.
Pre-Law Club
The pre-law club at
Lamar has chosen officers
for the 1956-57 term. Bob
Megarity was elected
president; Eldred McDan-
iel, vice-president; Maj-
orie Jones, secretary; and
Gerald Deffez, treasurer.
At the recent reorganiza-
tion of the club plans were
made for several field
trips to Jefferson County
federal and state courts.
A far reaching objective
of the club calls for an
associate relationship
with the lawyers in thin
area.
Anyone interested is in-
vited to join. Simply con-
tact one of the officers.
Regular meetings will be
held on the first and third
Thursday of each month at
7 p.m. Watch the Redbird
for the announcement of
the place.
LAST CHANCE!
to enter Reader's Digest
$41,000 CONTEST
It’s fun to do—and you may find
you know more about human na-
ture than you think! Just list, in
order, the six articles in October
Reader’s Digest you think readers
will like best. Couldn’t be simpler
—and you may win $5,000 cash
for yourself plus $5,000 in schol-
arships for your college.
Have you sent in your entry yet?
Entries must be postmarked by
midnight, Thursday, October 25.
Entry blanks available at your
college bookstore.
Sticklers!
"irs
TOASTED"
to taste
better I
LUCKY
STRIKE
/|!J^F0AST€D‘
V:
IF YOU HAVE recently become a smoker
(duffer puffer), ask any old-hand Lucky
smoker (prudent student) why he set-
tled on Luckies. Bet anything he says
they taste better. You see, Luckies’
fine, light, naturally good-tasting to-
bacco is TOASTED to taste even bet-
ter . . . cleaner, fresher, smoother. So,
when it’s light-up time, light up a Lucky.
You’ll say it’s the best-tasting cigarette
you ever smoked. Okay—what is a jail
at light-up time? Answer: Smoky
Pokey. Isn’t that criminal?
DON'T JUST STAND THERE . . .
Vi fSTICKLE! MAKE >25
Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming an-
swers. Both words must have the same number of sylla-
bles. (No drawings, please!) We’ll shell out $25 for all
we use—and for hundreds that never see print. So send
stacks of ’em with your name, address, college and class
to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER
CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!
<£>A. T. Co. FIOOVCT OV
AMERICA' I LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES
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Obenhaus, Leon. The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1956, newspaper, October 19, 1956; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth499075/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.