The Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, November 13, 1959 Page: 4 of 4
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Page 4
THE LONE STAR LUTHERAN
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Letters
to
World
of
Gene Ekenstam
last name
first name
dormitory residence
Phone FR 9-1412
amount of work desired (in hours per week)
A,
type of work desired
. remarks:
* 1
510 E. Court St.
SEGUIN, TEXAS
2
LEHMANN'S STORES
Seguin
► ♦♦♦♦♦I
BAENZIGER MODEL MARKET
of Happy Freshmen,
West Hall.
Ei'
Kc z' :
SPURRIER'S
Steaks & Seafood
M1CHNA FIRESTONE STORES
At 4 Corners & Downtown Seguin
New Braunfels
BRADY’S
REXALL DRUG STORE
Senate Submits Employment Plan
The Senate establishes each year a Student Employment Com-
mittee to aid in student placement in jobs on the campus and in
Seguin,, This committee is set up to find a job for students who wish
to work at odd intervals as well as students who desire regular part
time work.
Any student who is interested in this service and needs a job
should fill out the form below. This form can be used, or the informa-
tion can be placed on a 5” x 8” card. The information will then be
placed in the permanent files of the Student Employment Committee
for reference when a job is available.
It
Friday, November 13,
Pastor's Corner
(Pastor Lee Roy Brandes)
Emanuel’s Lutheran Church
“A Trivet Talks” might very well
•rt
able for the San Antonio Sym-
phony presentations. Those inter-
ested may contact Kathy Hans-
mire for purchase. Seats for the
individual concerts are sold at 55
cents for Beta members and 75
cents for their guests.
The campus grounds are once j special menu planned. Hurrah!
(please include a class schedule)
The Senate desires that this should become a regular service of
student government on the campus. If any problem arises, please
contact one of the members of the Student Employment Committee.
Student Employment Committee
Roy Crenwelge, Joan Schaller, Jean Roemer, Harlen
Aschen, Stanley Sultemeier
if the number of women dropouts person’^ “disposition”
is sufficient, these girls will be
moved to one of the “better”
dorms at the beginning of the sec-
ond term..
The problem? No one wants to
leave; for “home is where the
heart is.”
I know ... I live there!
West Hall "Vies"
With North Hall
The Home
Seguin’s Most Complete
Drug Store
' Good food for all"
A faculty committee has. drawn ■
up a tentative list of books which
will comprise the- reading list of:
the required reading plan which
will be initiated at TLC. -
Under this program, each stu-
dent must read 20 books in addi-!
tion to his regular course work'
over a period of four years in j
order to graduate. Five books a j
year will be required.
Books on the tentative list
which is now being circulated to
the faculty members for approval
and suggestions are listed below:
Benet, S. V., John Brown’s
Body
Butler, Samuef, The Way of All
Flesh
Dana, Two Years Before the
Mast
DeKruif, Microbe Hunters
Bronte, E., Wuthering Heights
Buck, Pearl, The Good Earth ■
Bunyan, Pilgrim’s Progress
Carroll, Lewis, Alice in Won-
derland
Gather, Death Comes for the-
Archbishop
Darwin, Origin of the Species
Defoe, Robinson Crusoe
Durant, Story of Philosophy
Franklin, Autobiography
Frost, Poems
Hardy, Tess of the D’Urber-'
villes
Hugo, Les Miserables
\7 a riatinc Pnlin'iniic !
By KAREN McCANN
It is rumored that West Hall
vies for first place with North.
Hall as to which is the most phys-
ically attractive dormitory on our
campus.
The girls who are residents of
the former “edifice,” however,
hold firmly to the old adages that
“beauty is only skin deep,” and
that “you mustn’t judge a book,
by its cover.”
It is not difficult, after care-
ful observation, to determine the
purpose for which the building
was originally intended. Happily,
though, Uncle Sam saw fit to al-
low it to be transported and al-
tered somewhat so that it might
be used for a slightly different
purpose.
I use the word “happily” be-
cause even though the closets are
small, the hall is narrow, sound
carries quite well, and there is
no private bath adjacent to each
spacious room, there is not one
be the headline for the thoughts
this week. According to Webster
a trivet is, “an ornamental metal
plate on very short legs, used uh- rt?
der a hot dish to protect the table.”
Trivets are also seen hanging on
walls as a decorative item — often
having on’ them some inscription.
The trivet I would like to tell
you about today is one which rests
on our table at home. On it are w
the words: “A merry heart doeth
good like a medicine.” Much to my
embarrassment I was not aware
for sometime’ that this is a passage
from the Bible—Proverbs 17:22.
(Yes, I didn’t study in that college I
course the way I should have.) The •r’
second part of Proverbs 17:22
states: “But a broken spirit drieth I
the bones.” Much has been written
in the past years on the part which
the mind or spirit play in making
good health possible,. Admittedly,-z ■
some may be a bit far-fetched, but
it can be said with little reserva-
tion that one of the -most import-
ant areas of research in medicine ‘
"/on in future years will
be in this area of what effect the
mind or spirit have upon the health O|
of an individual. One of the finest 4|
books on this matter which has
come to my attention is: Man’s
Right to Be Human by George C.
Anderson.
Tentative Book List Completed
Experience
Jeans, This Mysterious Universe-
Lindbergh, We
Lynd and Lynd, Middletown
More, Utopia
Parkman, The Oregon Trail
Chase. Stewart, The Proper
Study of Mankind
Rolland, Jean-Christophe
Lea, Tom, The Wonderful
I Country
Steffens, Autobiography
Tolstoy, Resurrection
Strackey, Queen Victoria
Halliburton, New Worlds
Conquer
Wharton, Ethan Frome
Alexis, Carrel, Man, The Un-
known
Yutang Lin, Importance of Liv-
| ing
Fairfield, Osborn, Our Plun-
dered Planet
Muier, Wilderness
John Muier
Lindberg, Anne Morrow, Gift
from the Sea
Loon, Wm. Van, V.an Loon’s
Geofgraphy
Ganow, G., Mr. Tompkins in
Wonderland
Turner, A. J., The Frontier in
American History.
Faculty members on the read-
, ing program committee are Dr.
■ Oscar Weigang, Dr. Robert Smith,
i Rev. Franklin Brehmer, and Dr.
Varieties of Religious ! E. B. Everitt.
girl that would consider trading
with one of the more “fortunate”
• TLC women. ------777.
The spirit of unity which exists, jeligk
among the residents seems to be
a phenomena peculiar to the sim-
ple dwelling. This feeling of one-
ness prevails year after year, re-
gardless of the gender of the stu-
dents who abide there.
Because of the overflow of
women students this semester,
girls again comprise the member-
ship of the “West Hall Crew.”
According to Those Who Know,
date cookies
cookies. After eating two boxes of
them and sitting -by the phone for
50 minutes she decided it was i
fruitless.
Pardon the mistake: Pixie, BJ,
and Bette are not the most active
sports spectators. Lundquist and'
MIscher discussing the ‘ irannc | egos and flghti„g ,(rugtration
configuration for the benefit of:
Baumbachism scholars” were much !
louder, and funnier.
For your cultural edification the] __________ __ ____....
Betas have concert tickets avail-; for a gift, for’ any kind of .persoip
the bookstore has a new supply
of TLC shirts, jewelry and post
cards. Really, a post card would
make a lovely gift to the home-
town mailman.
Only 12 days until Thanksgiving-
and . . . the Commons has a very
. . . and so ends the story of/7 J="d‘-'’oesn’t teach U. S.
the carefree college student, who! 11 le enjoys gardening
vowed from that day forth ever
to be studious and nevermore to
cut classes ... so your mid-
semester exams were a snap. That’s
about as funny as eating raw cran-
berries at a pep rally, or the head-
cheerleader trying to burn the
Homecoming bonfire.
Speaking of wet blankets, was
ajayone fortunate enough to escape
being doused by those deceiving
squirt rings?
Freshman Linda Bowman finally
confessed her mistake in thinking
were like. fortune
: which has been the most widely
I read, piece of literature in the wo-
men’s dorm since the last issue '
of the LSL, Billie June’s phone
number is: Taylor 2-7710.
Freshmen residents of the west
<( ■ ----1 wing of-Clifton are nursing hurt
fl antic j ppTK fio'tltincr . frlicrvclir,COm-
plexes. Their counselors didn’t hear
the door-slamming celebration at
one o’clock in the morning.
Incidentally, if you are looking
5c to 10c $1.00 & up
- - With Luncheonette - -
-feyhj ■ ■' ’ ■>
(Continued-from Page 2)
much more important question of
j the duties of an ELECTED rep-
I! resentative.
j; I feel that a representative
should endeavor to know the wish-
es of his constituents and should
give these wishes some consider-
ation instead of completely fol-
lowing his own personal opinions.
I do not feel that the fastest way
is always the best way.
But the representatives are not
completely at fault. Senate meet-
i ings are open to everyone, the
! Senate minutes are supposed to
be posted, and the Senate mem-
bers would probably be very glad
to listen to complaints and con-
structive ideas. People who refuse
to inform themselves really have
no reason to complain.
Students should keep track of
their representatives and let them
know both when they agree and
when they disagree. Whether one
believes that the representative
should vote in strict accordance
with the wishes of the students,
or if he believes they are free to
follow their own dictates, he
should definitely make himself
heard.
ODORLESS CLEANERS
Cleaning—Pressing—Alteration
— SEE —
Mark Streng, Gerald Johnson. Bob
Goodhart, Fred Bohls, Stanley
Sultemeier
TXXXXXX’XXX.XX T, !X XXXXX
■ sfti
i Oi ■
Would it not seem that from
this one passage alone that the
Bible does recognize very defin-
itely the relationship between a
and his
health. This passage does not stand
alone in emphasizing this.
The moral of the “Trivet-that
Talks” is simply this: “Approach-
life with a confident faith in God
who not only craved you but who
sustains ,yo>r each day” — isn’t
^hat'enough reason to have a mer-
ry heart?
Del Rio
tnximxmiziiuiiuir
• ■■ i ! • ... <-y
HERD IN THE HALL
By BEV MEYERS ■ again beginning to sparkle. Maybe :
. . Mid-so ends the story Ja^‘-d^n-t teach U.
as much as Mr. Menn, and the re-
sults show.
The boisterous wing of Clifton
with assorted guests celebrated
Evelyn Hartzendorf's birthday. In
that wing the only difference be-
tween a birthday party and an
ordinary night in the dorm are the
candles on the cake.
One of the bright campus social-
ites: “Go ahead, put me on disci-
plinary probation for cutting in
line . . . then I won’t have to go to
all these committee meetings!”
We report a deletion in the re-
cently published student directory
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The Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, November 13, 1959, newspaper, November 13, 1959; Seguin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1301256/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Lutheran University.