l Page 4 Official Notices Found WALLET—Owner may have same on Identification. See J. S. Hull or P. J. Ewald, Boyett Apts. Classified FOR RENT—1 Furnished apartment. E. E. Brown, Sulphur Springs Road, phone 4-8879. LOST—Western Flyer bicycle. Black with red on end of fenders, white side- wall tires and white head light on left handle bar. Red handle grips. Reward offered. If found phone 4-4479. J. O. Smith. LOST—A black zipper suitcase which was picked up on the Houston highway at the corner of Highway 6 and the road running past Consolidated School. Any one knowing its whereabouts please noti fy Tommy Flynn, Room 219, Dorm 17. A reward will be given. WANTED—Furnished apartment avail able anytime before February. Please con tact T. O. McMillan, 17 Milner Hall or P. O. Box 22. FOR SALE—Rug, curtains, Jr. blouse, shirt, and cap. See Sparger in 46 Good win. FOR SALE—Senior boots, size 8; in good shape. See Hood. 46 Goodwin. LOST—A light brown “California” jacket near Dorm 14. Reward for return to Room 119, Dorm 14. LOST—One pair of metal rim glasses in blue case. Liberal reward. Lost Mon day morning. 204 No. 16. Dr. N. B. McNutt DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady’s Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas l 1. 1 t-. . i Jii. 1 4 ji- 1 1 i.t i 1 i i 1 i EAT WELL . . . TO FEEL WELL Enjoy our fine and nutri tious foods which are care fully planned to include all the treats. A delightful va riety at all times. * New York Cafe Bryan Catafr 1 * Enjoy the warmth of fine all-wool Catalina sweaters. Catalinas are designed by the leading stylists of Hollywood — there’s plenty of New Weaves to choose from in Sleeveless Slipons .. . Slipons with Sleeves and smart Coat Styles. Sleeveless $2.50 to $4.00 Slipons $4. to $6 Coat Styles $5 to $7.50 Qlaldrop&(8 “Two Convenient Stores” College Station Bryai Meetings THE NEWCOMERS CLUB will meet Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 o’clock in the home of Mrs. L. E. Stark, 8U9 Ayrshire, College Park. Sewing only. THE COLLEGE CAMERA CLUB will meet in the Second-Floor Lounge of the Y.M.C.A. at 8:00 Wednesday evening, January 6. It is important that all mem bers be present as officers for next term will be elected. PORT ARTHUR CLUB—There will be a meeting of the Port Arthur Club Tues day, January 6, in the Academic Build ing. Election of officers will be held. Announcements THE LIBRARY NEEDS the following popular magazines to complete its files "or binding: American Mercury — September, 1942 Athletic Journal—October, 1941 Field and Stream—January, 1943 Newsweek—December 14, 21, 28, 1942 Sciece News Letter—August 8, 29, 1942 Time—July 14, 1942 FACULTY AND STAFF VOLLEY BALL—Those interested in playing volley ball should meet at the gymnasium Tues day and Thursday evenings at 7 p.m. The first session will be held January 6th. STUDENT STORAGE—All students still having items stored with the Student Storage Concession are requested to claim them not later than Saturday, January 16th. Items left after that date will be subject to sale in accordance with stor age agreement. A. & M. COLLEGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION office will be open 1:30-2:00 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays only until further notice. The Board of Directors have set Monday, January 18th, room 313 Agriculture Building at 7:30 p.m. as the date and place for the annual meeting. H. A. Dulan, Sec.-Treasurer ATTENTION AGRICULTURAL SEN IORS—Please call at my office and fill out personnel blanks for our permanent files. E. J. Kyle, Dean, School of Ag riculture. STUDENT EMPLOYMENT AND STU DENT CONCESSIONS—Any student ex pecting to do part-time work, or who ex pects to hold a student concession or agency of any kind during the coming semester is requested to call at the Placement Office and file a renewal of his student labor application. Renewals will be accepted at any time from January 6 through January 23. Stu dent employees are also reminded that they are expected to obtain cards from this ' office showing re-assignment to their jobs for the coming year. SOPHOMORE ENGLISH CONTEST—Stu dents now in college who took the ex amination for the Freshman English Con test last April are invited to enter a Sophomore English Contest, the exam ination for which will be given on or about January 18. If any of these stu dents fail to receive a circular concern ing the contest mailed on December 30, a copy is available at the English of fice The contest is open only to stu dents who were in the 1942 Freshman English Contest. —KYLE FIELD— (Continued From Page S) the basketball fans Saturday night .... The Aggies beat Duncan Field but the way they beat the Flyers warranted even some of the most optimistic partisans to look upon Aggie chances for a conference title with a grain of salt ... I realize that Manning Smith’s five had an off-night but a readjustment better be made rf the Maroon team has any aspir ations of taking TCU here next Saturday night . . . free-t h r o! w shooting, ball-handling and general defensive tactics were far off.... It looks as if that team substitu tion used by Smith may have to be altered some if it works.... Maybe I’m wrong—goodness knows, I’ve been wrong before— but I just don’t believe in sub stituting whole teams at a time whether it’s in football or basket- ball...Coach Dana X. Bible of the Texas Longhorns found out about that just in time in football and you ca nbe sure he won’t use that system again .... It’s the same in basketball .... The All-Swede All-American football team has been put out . . . Bill Henderson, Aggie end, made the first while Jannings Anderson, soph wing- back, was put on the third team.... Some fun, eh?. . . . —AGGIES— (Continued From Page 3) Sample C 0 12 1 Huffman G 5 0 0 10 Cokinos G 113 3 Pennington G 0 0 0 0 Sabins G 0 0 0 0 17 6 8 39 Duncan Field (33) Pos. FG FT PF TP Cox F 3 117 Ipxkawicz F 0 0 0 0 Weinman F 1113 Lane F 10 0 2 Hansen C 4 12 9 Tofoya G 2 2 3 6 Martin, C. R G 2 0 14 Rodriguez G 10 0 2 Martin, A. C G 0 0 0 0 14 5 8 33 El Paso Mothers Club Adds to Library Fund The Library has received from the El Paso A. & M. Mothers’ Club, a generous gift for the Stu dent General Reading Fund. This, with other gifts from Mothers’ Clubs over the State, will help the Library expand its present number of books. “This money is being sent by the Library, according to rules set up by a student Library com mittee, for good books which the boys want to read but which the Library would not be able to afford without your help,” T. F. Mayo, the Librarian said in a letter to the Club. * TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 5, 1943 Texas Claims Axis-Destroying Liberator Bomber as Its Own Plane Dottie Lamour and Richard Denning in a not-so-formal pose—of which there are many in “Beyond the Blue Horizon” showing today and tomorrow as half of the double feature at Guion Hall. C-Card Fans At Bowl Games Face Federal Checkers OPA Inspectors Check Out-of-Town Licenses For Gas Violations C-card holders who drove to the Cotton Bowl Friday for the Texas- Georgia Tech football game, espe cially those coming from other cities, appear headed for trouble. Inspectors from the state office of the Office of Price Administra tion at Fort Worth were at the Cotton Bowl, too. But they weren’t watching the game. They were checking the license numbers of au tomobiles bearing C-card stickers, especially those from out of town. Max McCullough, regional OPA director, said the investigation had been directed by Mark McGee, state OPA director. McCullough said he could not say what action, if any, would be taken. “Naturally, it will be determined who owned the cars,” he said. “That is the first step.” “C-cards were issued only to per sons who declared the unlimited mileage was necessary and they are supposed to be used only for the purposes declared in the appli cations. Certainly driving to a football game is not necessary. “Any driving for such purpose should come out of the ninety-mile- a-month allowance for family use. Any mileage above ninety is sup posed to be necessary. Other per sons are placed at an unfair dis advantage when C-card holders use their cards illegally.” McCullough said cars bearing B- cards also were checked, but the inspectors primarily were interest ed in the C-card cars which came from a distance.—(Dallas Morning News). THE BATTALION Glass Jewels Aid Instrument Makers Mass production of a glass sub stitute for war-scarce sapphire jewels has spurred the manufac ture of millions of delicate indi cating instruments used in field radio sets, mobile power stations, searchlights, and radio control equipment oboard planes, ships, and tanks. The moving parts of such instru ments are of watch size and deli cacy, each requiring two cup shaped jewels comparable in size to the head of a pin. These are known as “vee’ jewels, for in the flat top of each is a V-shaped de pression in which rotates a cone- shaped steel pivot. Before the war American de mand for vee jewels was supplied chiefly by Swiss crafsmen, who cut them from natural or synthetic sapphires. That supply is now hopelessly inadequate. Intensive experimentation in General Elec tric laboratories has resulted in a vee jewel made of a special type of glass, fused and formed by a mass-production process. As a result, G.E. now produces enough vee jewels for its own instrument output and also sends hundreds of thousands yearly to other instru ment makers. U S Relief Groups Aid Russian Students The World Student Service Fund, the Student War Relief Agency whose work goes on in 14 Countries on five continents, is functioning to aid the students of Russia to carry on. The great ranks of them have been affected: those whose families lived in the scorched earth areas and who have been cut off from financial aid from home; and those enrolled in institutions immersed by the in vasion which have been forced to move on to new locations. Russians—men, women and even children—are fighting on the bat tle front. These staunch people must find the way for their stu dents to carry on, for leadership for the Russia of the future and for aid to Russia now. Most desperately needed are medical students to aid the vast ly increasing number of wounded from the battle front. From Rus sian students came a request to the World Student Service Fund to send medical squipment and medical books to help them in their crisis. To Kharkov Medical Insti tute, now at Chkalov in the South- em Urals, books were sent. From Russia has come the following cable of gratitude: “Kharkov Medical Institute ex presses warm gratitude for gen erous gift World Student Service Fund and sends heartfelt greet ings to this association, which like youth of all freedom-loving de- Student Service Fund Aids U S Prisoners Pearl Harbor laid directly on the doorstep of America the need for the continued work of the World Student Service Fund—the student war relief agency whose work goes on in 14 countries on 5 continents. The outbreak of war with Japan meant that soon there would be American Prisoners of War in the Far East. In 1929 three Japanese delegates signed the Geneva Convention gov erning the treatment of Prisoners of War. Though the Japanese government did not ratify it at the time, Japan has announced sines Pearl Harbor that she would abide by the terms of this treaty. Within the framework of the Convention a few relief organiza tions are allowed to function in side prison camps to provide var ious kinds of services for prisoners of war. The World Student Serv ice Fund is one of these. From its office at 8 West 40th Street, New York, an appeal for books went to American colleges. These books are on a ship ready for shipment to American prison camps in the Far East. These books and other study materials will make it possible for Ameri can boys to occupy their minds during the long months of im prisonment and for many of them whose college work was interrupted to take up studies again. To a neutral committee in Tokio, made up of Swedish and Swiss officials and of representatives of the International Red Cross, has gone from the World Student Service Fund and from War Pris oners’ Aid of the Y.M.C.A. These funds will be used to buy many items needed and wanted by the American prisoners. From students who are fortu nate enough to still be in American colleges, gifts of money and books will revive in the hearts of Ameri cans, doomed to imprisonment “for the duration”, courage for the future and zeal to develop po tential qualities of leadership for our nation in the years that are to be. A student in an American uni versity remarked recently as he sent his gift “Who knows when anyone of us will be on the re ceiving end of the line?” mocratic countries is today united in deep feeling of fraternal solidar ity. We have deep faith in our victory, in future close ties be tween scientists and students of the USSR and mighty transat lantic republic.” Through the courtesy of the Russian War Relief other forms of aid will be able to go from the World Student Service Fund. Help must not be denied to these stu dents who are studying so heroic ally in spite of bombings and hard ships. Texas-built heavy bombers are spilling packages of death over Axis-held territories fro the North Pacific to the Medeteranean. The great B-24’s, otherwise des ignated as Liberators, can be called Texas’ own planes. The Fort Worth plant of the Consoli dated Aircraft Corporation turned out the first B-24 there 100 days ahead of schedule, then answered the call for cargo planes by put ting out the first C-87 thirty days ahead of schedule. Why is Texas proud of the Lib erator? Just flip through the files of any newspaper from December, and you’ll find a record something like this: North Pacific.—Army Liberator bombers attacked Japanese shore installations on Island of Kiska in the Aleutians. Heavy explosions and fires were observed. In First U. S. Raid on Italy South Pacific.—B-24 bombers at tacked Jap forces on New Guinea front, concentrating their attention on Madang, north of Vitiaz Strait, where the enemy was believed to have landed troops. Bombers blasted wharf area there with 600- pound bombs, starting numerous fires and wrecking a warehouse. Three of eight Jap fighters, try ing to intercept them, were shot down. Itall.—Liberators took part in the first American raid on Italy, heavily damaging entire city of Naples. after his rescue in a converted B-24 bomber. Yes, the Liberator is doing its job all over the wirld, and its per formance reflects the skill of Texas craftsmen. Range Exceeds 3,000 Miles Many of its technical details are military secrets, but the War De partment does allow publication of a few details. The Liberator is powered by four fourteen-cylinder engines, is capable of a speed of more than 300 miles an hour, and has a range in excess of 3,000 miles. It is a high-winged mono plane with full retractable tricycle landing gear, and armor protection ‘o bring it abreast of the latest requirements in modern warfare. Fhe span is more than 100 feet, length is more than sixty feet, and it has a bomb capacity of more than four tons. Do they ever crack up? Yes, all airplanes are vulnerable. But in the Aleutian Islands, a cracked-up B-24 wasn’t deserted. The Army Air Forces turned it into a control tower, with the central man stand ing where a gun turret formerly was placed, and the sock for indi cating wind direction flying from a staff amidship!—(Dallas Morn ing News) Buescher-Bastrop Park, Bastrop County, famous for “lost pines,” is one of Texas’ best-developed state parks. NO! You’re not well-dressed without that neat-looking haircut you can get at . . . AGGIELAND BARBER SHOP North Gate ATTENTION AGGIES There are still a few free Aggie wind shield stickers left at our place at the North Gate. Come by and get one. AMERICAN STEAM LAUNDRY WHAT CIGARETTI GIVES SMOKERS WHAT THEY WANT Mil ^ ^ y' ^Sj/ Make your next pack in 1943 a pack of m- Wilder, Better-Tasting Chesterfields and en\oy more ^| : jjw ® making pleasure the whole year through.,^ S V Chesterfield’s Right Combination of the ^ «§» world’s best cigarette tobaccos gives you jgpy. 't ^ Av' ^ ll^L everything you like best in a smoke. Jg||§|r *• > A v . y lhat’s why, year after year, you hear Ipifcw ' C* O / ^ more smokers say, "You can’t buy a \ ^ ^ OP' better cigarette .. .They Satisfy " \ : ^ For More Listening Measure in ’43 Tune in on Amer ica’s Most Popular Fifteen Minute Musical Programs ry W, “SO ^ Senjolional HARRY JAMES all NBC Stations ^ all CBS Stations - 1 ♦ L 1 * Xt A 4: UtA-,*' J4