P a g e 4- -THE BATTALION- OFFICIAL NOTICES Wanted to buy—A good used standard pewriter if in A-l condition. Prefer Royal. Call Bill Thomas at typewriter Underwood Underwood or Royal. Call Bill Thomas at 2-1477. Residence, 806 E. 28th St., Bryan, Texas. P. O. Box 894. The Newcomers Club will meet at the home of Mrs. A. E. Salis, 221 James Parkway, College Hills, on Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. The afternoon will be spent at bridge and sewing. All freshmen, 1st term and 2nd term, report as early as possible to Personnel Office, Room 101, Academic Building. Mr. G. B. Wilcox. Edgerton Shoes are ON THE MARCH Other Stylet $6.75 to $7.95 FOR MIN A big favorite with of ficers and enlisted men, this Edgerton plain toe buckler is marching to great heights in popular ity. Ration Stamp Number 17 expires Tuesday, June 15th—get your shoes today. fliadropfffi “Two Convenient Stores” College Station ireijg The Wednesd: WTA ; A. & M. Radio Club will mee lesday night at 7 o’clock in th W Studio, third floor of the Admin .S 7', ;ij* A” ~ I ~ 3 J 5 7 , ra K i for students to make C. itudio, third floor of the Admin istration Building. All students interested in taking part in radio programs vited. The meeting will be over programs are in- in time Q. 5T—In Bryan Saturday evening. War unendorsed allotment check to Iris e Rice. Finder call 2-1269. Reward. LOST—In Bryan Saturdai Dept. Jeanne Rice. Finder call 2-1269. Kewai A/S Frank Rice, Sqd. 2, Flight B, Pfeuffer Hall. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES—Any student who normally expects to complete all the requirements for a degree by the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s Office NOW and make formal application for a degree.—R. G. Perryman, Assistant Registrar. for 1st Head- GENERAL ORDER NO. 6: So much of GENERAL ORDER NO. 1, Paragraph No. 1, Current Series, is cor rected to read as follows: I. ASSIGNMENTS: . 1. Dormitory No. 16: 1st floor, 1st Headquarters Co. 2nd floor, Company “A” 3rd floor. Company “B” 4th floor. Band. Office and Headquarters quarters Co. and Companies A. B, and Band—Room 232, Dormitory No. 16. Tel ephone 4-8114 Tactical Officer, Lt. Ross F. Snider. 2. Dormitory No. 16: 1st floor, 2nd Headquarters Co. 2nd floor, Company “C” 3rd floor. Company “D” loor. Company “E” e and Headquarters for 2nd Head quarters Co. and Companies C, D, and E, Room 213, Dormitory No. 15. Telephone 4-9834. Tactical Officer, Lt. A. J. Gi fola. 3. Dormitory No. 17: 1st floor, 3rd Headquarters Co. 2nd floor, Company “F” 4th fl Office uarter AMERICAN HEROES BY LEFF Hyman Epstein knew that after wounding a man the Japs around Sanananda were withholding their fire, using the injured soldier for bait until unarmed medical aides like himself came into range. Yet again and again he crept out under sniper fire to rescue wounded comrades until at last the Japs got him. “That kid was the best,” his commander said of determined little Hymie Epstein. Are you buying War Bonds as determinedly? V. S. Treasury Department. 3rd floor, Company “G” '•th floor, Company “H” — and Headquarters Co. and Companies F, G, and Room 201, Dormitory No. 17. Telepho 4 Office and Headquarte: quarters Co. ito: for 3rd Head- d H, Room 201, Dormitory No. 17. Telephone 4-1167. Tactical Officer, Lt. M. H. Beams. 4. Dormitory No. 14: 1st floor, 4th Headquarters Co. 2nd floor, Company “I” Office and Headquaretrs for 4th Head quarters Co. and Co. I, Room 132, Dor mitory No. 14. Telephone 4-4074. Tactical Officer, Maj. G. P. Lemer. 5. Walton Hall: Ramps A, B, & C, 1st Company. Ramps D, E, F, and G, 2nd Company. Office and Headquarters for 1st and 2nd Companies, Room A-l, Walton Hall, Telephone 4-4579. Tactical Officer, Maj. J. E. Breland. Flood Control To Be Discussed At St. Louis Meeting The flood control conference called by the Mississippi Valley Association to consider both im mediate and long range flood con trol plans for this year’s flood striken areas will be held at Hotel Statler in St. Louis on June 28, it is announced by Lach lan Macleay, president of the as sociation. Two nationally known speakers who will address the conference will be Congrassman Will M. Whittington, of Mississippi, chair man of the House Committee on Flood Control and one of the outstanding authorities of the na tion on flood control, and Major- General Eugene Reybold, Chief of the United States Army Engi neers. Following their formal ad dresses the conference will be opened to discussion from the KEEP COOL-- . WITH CASEY’S DELICIOUS DRINKS THESE HOT DAYS AT THE “Y” TO BE MILITARY Be Neat in Appearance get your UNIFORMS CLEANED and PRESSED Frequently by the CAMPUS CLEANERS Medical Science Finds New Use For Hundred-Million Volt Ray Machine Electrons, or cathode rays, fired from a new hundred-million-volt machine now nearing completion in the General Electric Research Laboratory at Schenectady, N. Y., may prove superior to x-rays for treatment of deep tumors, accord ing to Dr. William D. Coolidge, G-E vice president in charge of research. “When the X-ray work of our laboratory started about thirty years ago,” he said, “it was diffi cult to produce X-rays of much more than a hundred thousand volts. We now have over forty one- million-volt outfits in use in war industries and are preparing to built a two-million-volt outfit of floor. Invitations to attend the con ference are being' sent to mem bers of Congress in the flood area, the governors of the flood states, county and municipal of ficials in the flood territory and two representatives of civic, bus iness and agricultural organiza tions. The area for which flood control measures will be consid ered includes the Missouri Basin, the Illinois Basin, the Lower Ohio Basin, the Upper Mississippi Basin, the Arkansas Basin and the Wabash Basin. Macleay pointed out that the Mississippi Valley Association called a similar conference in March, 1937, following the dis astrous flood in the Ohio Valley that year. The Conference helped obtain the authorization by Con gress of an $800,000,000 flood control program for the Ohio Basin, of which a large portion has been completed. The United States Army Engi neers will have ready before the conference meets a plan for im mediate flood control projects in the Lower Missouri Valley. Other projects for immediate clood con trol measures will be ready for consideration. In addition, Mac leay emphasized, the conference will consider a long range pro gram for the unified control of flood waters and their economic use instead of waste for the Mis sissippi Valley. The floods this year in the eight states affected—South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Hli- nois, Indiana, Arkansas and Ok lahoma—inundated more than 3,000,000 acres of valuable farm land, caused property damage amounting to millions of dollars and rendered nearly 200,000 per sons homeless. The Mississippi Valley Associa tion has consistently worked for a unified program of flood con trol on a national scale, Macleay said. The association’s 1943 plat form recognized that the war emergency program must come first, but urged that “all flood control projects that have been authorized by Congress should be completed and put into operation at the earliest possible time.” Education and psychology de partments at Colgate University have started a special study in the field of occupations to determine how the university _ can give in creased service i!o industry. Curriculum requirements his tory majors at Hunter college have been revised to provide greater flexibility in choice of courses as well as to give training in inde pendent research. the same type. “Furthermore, we recently built, with the help of Dr. Donald Kerst of the University of Illinois, an induction electron accelerator for twenty million volts, and have now almost finished a larger one de signed to operate at voltages up to a hundred million. This last de vice used as a source of X-rays, should enable us to determine what radiographic and other useful re sults can be accomplished by such high-voltage radiation. “This same device will also ren der available for physical, chemi cal and medical experimentation cathode rays corresponding to these same enormous voltages. In the medical field these cathode rays may have a good deal of ther apeutic interest in the treatment of deep-seated tumors, since they will have sufficient penetration and since, unlike X-rays and gamma rays from radium, their effect will be a maximum near the end of their range -— properties which should facilitate the destruction of a tumor without damage to the overlying tissues.” Dr. Coolidge predicted far- reaching effects from present war time radio research. “In radio,” he declared, “tre mendous advances are taking place which are not only vital in the war effort but will he of inesti mable peacetime value, permitting us to see distant objects in the dark or through a fog and so enabling us to avoid collisions at sea and enter harbors under poor conditions of visibility, to avoid collisions in the air and to make safe blind landings.” “Much of our wartime work in radio will contribute to making television in peacetime a wide spread educational and entertain ing feature in the home. I don’t think that we realize at all what they will mean to us. It should even result in better government. It will give us much stronger feel ings about the candidates for whom we vote. We get a great deal from the content of a speech and from the sound of a voice, but it will be helpful for us to see the speaker.” Post-war aviation, he predicted, “will take us as far from the auto mobile as the automobile took us from the horse-and-buggy age. It is hard to realize today the ex tent to which this is true—the speed, the increase in safety, the ability to travel in all weathers, the possibilities of the new heli copter in taking us from our own dooryards to our camps or to com mercial airplane fields.” Members of the G-E laboratory staff, he stated, “and, for that matter, the majority of the scien tists of the country, are devoting their entire energy at high pres sure to war work, and we see sci ence playing so vital a role that it may win or lose the Struggle.” “While this war, which has forced the diversion of so much scientific effort from the construc tive aims of peace to the destruc tive aims of combat, represents in magnitude the greatest tragedy which civilization has ever encoun tered, much of the war work will have lasting value, and in many important lines research is being prosecuted at a rate which would be quite out of the question in peacetime. This is especially true in the fields of physics and chem istry. Most of this work is of so confidential a nature that it can not be publicly discussed at this time.” LISTEN TO WTAW 1150 Tuesday, June 16 11:25 a.m. Today’s Summary on the Home Front. 11:30 a.m. Economics Department —Mr. Nutter. 11:45 a.m.—Chats to Texas Home makers—Barbara Hopkins. 11:55 a.m. News—Interviews. 12:00 a.m.—Sign-off. Wednesday, June 16 6:02 a.m. Texas Farm and Home Program — TQN. Poultry — D. H. Reid; Triple-A, Howard Stewart. 11:25 a.m. Today’s Summary on the Home Front. 11:45 a.m. Treasury Star Parade. 11:45 a.m. Extension Program—L. C. Eakin of Caldwell County. 12:00 a.m. Sign-off. REHABILITATION (Continued From Page 1) Tripolitania, Hoehler dispatched two teams of field men with truck convoys provided by the army into areas where military action had made it essential that local sup plies of food and clothing be sup plemented by relief material as a matter of military and political necessity. Initial reports to Herbert H. Lehman, Director of Foreign Re lief and Rehabilitation Operations, from Hoehler show that small stockpiles of essential food and clothing assembled by OFRRO in cooperation with the military in or near Tunisia were utilized for pri mary civilian needs. This stock pile, which by the time of the ma jor military offensive approximat ed 10 thousand tons, was com prised of cotton cloth, condensed and powdered milk, flour, sugar and clothing. HoeMer’s reports, based on his own surveys and those of Herbert W. Parisius of Elroy, Wisconsin, Chief Agricultural expert on the OFRRO North African staff, in dicate that prospects for supply of civilians in Tunisia are much bet ter than had been anticipated prior to the Allied victory over the Axis forces. Trek Thru Dense Jungle Brings Four Fliers To Safety PARAMARIBO, Dutch Guiana. —The forced landing of an Amer ican transport plane in the Dutch Guiana jungle three weeks ago was disclosed Thursday with the ar rival here of four of the plane’s crew of four men. The men made a two weeks’ trek through the dense jungle and, aid ed by friendly Indians, reached here in good condition. They have already left for an undisclosed destination. (This dispatch as passed by the censor in Paramaribo did not indi cate whether the grounded plane was a military or commercial transport, and it did not name the crew members.) The plane was forced down in a remote part of the jungle. The crew members, employing what their superiors termed exceptional judgment, made no immediate at tempt to leave their craft. Instead, carefully rationing their foodstuffs, they set up a camp and for several days rested while they treated their minor injuries and recovered from shock. Then they set out to find an inhabited place. They waded through swamps waist-deep in water, for several days until they reached a small river, and there they constructed a primitive raft. Drifting down stream, they were sighted by an Indian who took word of his find to his village. The villagers then helped the four to get to this city. Authority On Rent Control May Be Exercises Here' W. H. Roberts, manager of the Rent Control office in Bryan, re ports that a number of Brazos county landlords have failed to re duce their rents to the March 1942 level. This should be done at once, Mr. Roberts states, to avoid pen alties which may be assessed against those house owners failing to comply. Landlords who have not regis tered their propetty are urged to do so before June 15, in order that inconveniences m* y be avoided. - NEW SIGHTING - (Continued From Page 1) it can be adapted to sight other types of rifles. Tests showed that the last four inches of the bore at the muzzle of the Garand rifle substantially determine the trajectory of a bul let fired from it, and the develop ment of the sighting device was conducted with that established fact as the starting point. What the gage actually does is to trans fer the sight setting from a “mas ter” rifle, correctly sighted by fir ing, to rifles substantially sighted in the equipment. The gage is set for accurate use by placing the master rifle in it, and adjusting the equipment to conform to the bore direction and sight positions of the master rifle. When other rifles placed in the gage are aligned with the target optical system, and their lights moved to the proper relation as designated by the sight projectors, they are given the line-of-sight to line-of- bore relationship established by the master rifle. The gage fixture holds a rifle at two points, by a 3-jaw chuck near the front of the muzzle, and by a clamp which grips the gun’s receiver just ahead of the trigger mechanism. Positioning the rifle is accompanied by two handwheels which move the clamp arrange ment holding the rear of the gun vertically and horizontally. Rota tion takes place about a point at the center of the bore of the rifle at the muzzle where it is gripped by the chuck. The chuck is sup ported on a small gimbel to pre vent any strain being placed on the barrel. The target optical system con sists of a light source and condens ing lens, a cross-shaped aperture, a concave mirror mounted on the end of a 4-inch bore plug, an ad justable mirror mounted above the light source, and a mirror and ground glass screen on the main fixture. The light bulb, lens, aper ture, and adjustable mirror are contained in the separate target unit which is mounted approxi mately six feet in front of the main fixture and facing it. The concave mirror is mounted on a bore plug. The plug is in serted in the muzzle of the rifle for each sighting, its mirror fac ing the separate target unit. Light leaves the bulb in the tar get unit, passes through the lens and the aperture, and is focussed on the concave mirror on the plug -TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 15, 1943 in the shape of the bulb filament. It reflects to the adjustable mir ror mounted above the bulb in the target unit, and then back to the mirror on the main fixture which throws the cross image on the viewing screen. Focal length of the concave mirror on the plug is such that it focuses the image of the cross aperture on the screen. The two sight projectors are opticals ystems designed to magni fy the images of the sights approx imately 25 times and focus them on viewing screens. They are mounted on separate arms so that they may be lifted to permit in serting and removing the rifle. The two arms rotate about a common shaft, and are raised by a handle attached to the shaft. The arms and projectors are held in the up position by an automatic latch. Each projector has a dash pot which prevents it from being jarred when dropped into position, and individual stops to limit the downward position. The electrical system consists of a single-phase, 110 to 6 volts, 200 v a transformer which sup plies power to the three No. 1183 Mazda auto headlamp bulbs. The $18,300,000,000 subscribed in the second War Loan was about half a billion dollars short of equal ling the total amount—$18,800,- 000,000—subscribed in the first four war loans of the last war. After July 1, luggage will be made in 7 basic types and will be drastically limited in size and de sign. VICTORY BUY UNITED STATES WAR BONDS AND STAMPS DR. N. B. McNUTT DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady’s Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas NAVASOTA MUNICIPAL SWIMMING POOL Sunday - Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday - Saturday 3:00 P. M. 10:00 P. M. Thursday 3:00 P.M. - 9:00 P.M. Friday 5:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M. Admission 25c IF IT’S PEVCHIN’ - - THERE’S NO USE BLEEDIN’ Come Over and Get a Between Meal Snack at CHARLIE’S Everything You’ll Want To Eat!!! CHARLIE’S FOOD MARKET North Gate SMART UNIFORMS Require a Smart Appearance VISIT OUR SHOP OFTEN YMCA & VARSITY BARBER SHOP OLD “Y” NEW “Y”