The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1958 Page: 3 of 4
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. Monday, November 24, 1958
THE RANGER
Page Three
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—The Reader’s Digest
After Six....
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BUDGET ACCOUNT INVITED
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• TAN
• BROWN
L. M. Gale shows LeRoy Haws, staff photo-
grapher, the latest tux styles.
THESE QUESTIONS
WILL TELL YOU! * /
Wife leaving movie, to hus-
band: “I wish just once they’d
have as good a picture this week
as they’re going to have next
week!”
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■* |
Cummer Bunds ................$5.95
Formal Stud Sets ..............$3.50
Plus Tax
Manhattan Formal Shirts $5.25
DAVID MILLS
105 E. HOUSTON NEXT TO TEXAS THEATRE
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TUXEDO SUIT $5250
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4. Do you (A) try to figure out ahead
what each day will bring, or (B)
face problems, as they come along?
3. Before making a complex decision,
is your first move (A) to marshal
the facts, or (B) to ask the
advice of a respected friend?
8. Would you rather be known as a
person who (A) works well with
others, or (B) accepts
responsibility on his own?
I <>-
Hernandez New Secretary
Mary Hernandez should have
been listed in the last issue as
the secretary-treasurer of the
Methodist Student Movement,
rather than Mary Valdez.
*
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!
Chemical changes actually take
place in the body when one is
listening to music, long hair or
rock ’n roll, according to Dr. Mar-
jorie Walthall of the SAC music
department.
With Mrs. Miriam Wagner at
the piano to assist her in illus-
trating her points, Dr. Walthall
recently lectured to the students
of Our Lady of the Lake College
on the subject of “Emotional and
Chemical Changes Produced in
the Body by Music.”
Dr. Walthall stated that music
has been used by employers to
ease tension and increase effici-
ency in employees. Dentists also
have discovered the power of
music to relieve nervousness
and pain, and restaurants have
long been aware that music with
food relaxes their customers and
makes their food more enjoyable.
Mrs. Wagner played selections
from Chopin, Strauss, Beethoven,
Lizst, De Bussy, and Bach to il-
lustrate the different moods and
feelings that may be induced by
music.
: ■
MABEL’S
223 EAST HOUSTON STREET
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Jessup Writes Novel
With Texas Setting
Dr. Josephine Lurie Jessup,
temporary instructor at San An-
tonio College, is the author of a
novel recently published by Whit-
land Press. The book, which is
entitled “For the Glory of God:
A Love Story,” deals with the
transformation of a worldly
woman into a Christian through
the love and suffering of her
husband. It tells the story of the
marriage of Vance Abingdon, a
painter and intensely religious
man, to Martha Dubrozhin,
daughter of a Russian immigrant
disbeliever.
The story is told against the
growth of a Texas town—San
Porfirio—from prairie to metro-
polis, from catfishing bayou to
world port, from cow country to
oil country.
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1. Do you find going “off the
beaten track” on a trip
(A) interesting and constructive, or
(B) merely inconvenient?
9. When you step up to a cigarette
counter, are you (A) confused
by all the conflicting filter
claims you’ve seen, or (B) sure
of what you want because you’ve
thought things through?
7. Would you prefer a job (A) in an
old established firm offering
security, or (B) a small company
which could expand rapidly?
6. If you were getting furniture for
a room, would you look first for
(A) something comfortable, or (B)
something colorful and unusual?
Singing Stars . . .
(Continued from Page 2)
hour color television show in
which she is the star. A family
and a career are both looked for-
ward to enthusiastically, and
Betty hopes to prove that they
can be combined successfully.
Jimmy Starts at SAC
“I sang at school for an A. D.
P. show, and the next thing I
knew, I had cut my first record,”
said Jimmy, speaking of his
speedy success as a rock ’n roll
singer. One month after he ap-
peared at SAC he signed a re-
cording contract with TNT, and
later transferred to Dot. Not long
after this his recording of “Hen-
rietta” was appearing on the
record popularity charts all over
the nation. Several months ago
he picked a second hit with
“Here I Come.” Another record is
due soon after Christmas, “I
Feel Like Rocking.”
At present, Jimmy is going to
SAC and is studying drama, radio
and television. He appears at the
King of Clubs and the Silver
Spur on alternate Sundays. Some
of his most successful appear-
ances have been on American
Bandstand-, Country Jubilee, and
at the Sands in Las Vegas. He
would like to complete his educa-
tion at the Hollywood Finishing
School, where a student can tour
and get a degree at the same
time.
His goals: Another hit record
and possibly a movie career.
POLISHED
COTTON
SLACKS
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You will notice that men and women
who think for themselves usually choose
VICEROY. Why? Because they’ve thought
it through—they know what they want
in a filter cigarette. And VICEROY gives
it to them: a thinking man's filter and a
smoking man's taste.
*If you have checked (A) on 3 out of the
first 4 questions, and (B) on 4 out of the
last 5..•you think for yourself!
© 1958, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
on a
ONLY VICEROYHAS A THINKING MAN’S
A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE f
2. In a heated discussion would you
rather (A) be the “moderator,”
or (B) jump in on a side using
any argument to win?
• BLACK
• CHARCOAL
& Sportswear
Travis at Jefferson
| Opposite St. Anthony Hotel
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F. T.
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The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows
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A MUST FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON
tototoJ to- „
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Do You Think for Yourself ?('
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5. When writing a letter applying for
y a job, would you try to make it
' (A) original and off-beat, or (B)
factual and concise?
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♦
MRS. MIRIAM WAGNER
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DR. MARJORIE WALTHALL
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A Chemical Reaction to Musk?
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San Antonio College. The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1958, newspaper, November 24, 1958; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1333575/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting San Antonio College.