Wing Tips SQUADRON III MR. EKSTRAND—How many nails does the little bridge have that you so frequently visit ? * * * MR. RILEY—was very disap pointed when he found out he couldn’t fly these “Cubs” like they do in the movies. * * * MR. HANSON—His face will be reading—red—after the instruc tor asked him to find the little house that wasn’t there. * * * MR. MORGAN—found it rather confusing when he came out of the “Cumulus” and just couldn’t find out where he was. * * * MR. PETER DELL—Bringing that so called, “Gum” to his First Aid Instructor. Gum-chewing— what? * * * MR. DAVID BANCROFT— What would he do if the mail ser vice between Houston and College Station were discontinued ? —T. C. Cottrell knowledge that is handed out in class—is Mr. Neil Dodge’s motto. He bid History goodbye this week with a 97 AVERAGE term grade to his credit. * * * MR. LEE SALTSBURG—Is pre paring his speech for the career in Public Speaking. English class requires some practise, so the boys are taking it like troopers. * * * THE HERMIT Mr. E. W. Papik, alias the Pittsburgh Kid has holed up in his room ever since we arrived here and never shows his handsome (?). Come on out, ‘Pap’, she won’t mind if you take a walk around the block! —Clifford Gerry SQUADRON IV WALTER E. GREGORY—The first case of love sickness struck without warning last week after meeting a real Texas cowgirl. The only facts the reporter learned was the fact that her father owns a nice ranch close by and that she is coming back. * * * HENRY THE NAVIGATOR— Henry W. Clark Jr. was tempor arily lost Monday while transfer ring from School C to D. When flight 44 picked him up he was flying a Great Circle course from room to room of the Agriculture Building. * * * A/S LEO PARR, bugle boy, has just announced the setting of the date of his marriage to Miss Mar garet Traynor of Enid, Oklahoma. The date is June 7th, 1947. He believes in getting a bid in early. * * * MASTER MIND—Don’t duck the SQUADRON V STINKO—What happened to Mr. Alvin Miller during the last Wing Ball? Physics in question —does it smell badly to have lim- burger spread on radiators with windows all closed up, etc? * * * A/S LIGHTSTONE, PHILIP Will have Honorable MRS. LIGHTSTONE travel down with honorable off-spring very soon. (Gentlemen: An inspiration for the great Master Mind will then be accomplished.) * * * SHEMROSKE, ANTHONY — One day a sudden gust of wind will occur and then the “Great Jughead”, through the experiment and testing of falling body (Phys ics) take place. The entire fea ture will be sponsored by the Anti cyclone Prevention and be kind to your web footed friends commit tee. (Falling bodies fall down.) * * * A/S FLOYD A. BUTLER-Of- ficial title — “Wind Breaker”. (Why?) * * * A-16—What goes on behind the closed doors of room A-16? Why is it that the locks on the doors are always locked? (Mystery— will be solved.) —Roving reporter. THURSDAY MORNING. JANUARY EDITOR. Francis D. Wallace Managing: Editors William A. Miller Richard K. Brome Feature Editors Hilary B. Mattingly I Lt. W. F. Moist Sports Editors Windell W. Melton Robert J. Kerrigan | A/S W. A. Miller Music Editor Vincent Nonnemecher Calendar Editor Howard E. Leap Editorial Board A/S F. D. Wallace A /S R. K. Brome ediate vicinity a formal din- you from your ing served by le. ormal dinner all the forks, s necessary course. Start lid work in to- Ithe forks will he knives and ‘Foreign Correspondent” is the feature attraction at the Campus on Thursday and Friday. The film stars Joel McCrea, Lorraine Day, and George Sanders in an exciting episode of an American correspondent who is on the trail of the • assasin of diplomat. All across important Holland the Squadron II Suspected In Missing Guidon Case “News” Reporter Uncovers Startling Facts In Mystery of Squadron Four’s Standard By Hilary B. Mattingly With the departure of the “Mighty Midgets” to San Anton io, the mystery of missing guidons grows even more dense, as the disappearance of Squadron IV’s guidon and newly acquired mess ribbon was announced by Mr. C. A. Deislinger, guidon bearer of Squadron IV, last Monday night. For some time many a guidon has been reported missing from various squadron orderly rooms, and in some cases they were never found and had to be replaced with new ones. As far back as this reporter was able to trace the mys tery, we find the old Squadron IV making off with the late Squad ron IPs guidon when it left for the SAACC some four months ago. The mystery deepened during the latter part of Squadron IPs stay here when it lost its guidon two other times, and was unable to find it on both occasions. Their embarrassment reached a peak one afternoon when they were “Courtesy of Skyways Magazine” Physics, phooey! Squadron I. N. C. O. Gets Staff Rating It’s Staff Sergeant Ray A. Hutchinson now. The new rating for the tactical LOUPOT’S A Little Place . . . ... A Biff Savinff non-commissioned officer of Squad ron I came through Monday, re warding his approximately ten months of service with the 308th College Training Detachment. Sgt. Hutchinson is a veteran of nearly four year’s service with the army. He was a cadet for a time, until his color-blindness caught up with him. Now he contents himself with guiding prospective Beavers of the 308th along the Air Crew training version of the straight and narrow. Stop In at George’s — for a SANDWICH COLD DRINK Use the ’phone — Hear the Juke Box GEORGE’S CONFECTIONERY AT NEW “Y” Bowling League Gets Underway u only in the of statements | knife may be alad. poth the right —REGISTRATION- (Continued from page 1) ternoon, January 28 from 1:00 p. m. until 5:00 p.m. Cadets completing their school work on Saturday will move their NcVM!?m 1 --uTCBTitu t 5i— ir new ioom as - In the words of the GI classicist| it was a clear case of snafu. And a bunch of sad Beavetiys, musicians ended a hectic afteru noon Sunday of almost, but no1 quite broadcasting. Due, they thought, at 3 p. for a half-hour (they broadcast over station tie supervision hers Saturday 29, from 8:00 >n. and corri- neat and III the Squadron I and Squadron bowlers split the honors on first two games of the opening match of the Beaver Bowling league at YMCA alleys Sunday night, with the deciding lines left to be rolled, while Squadron PV won their three-game match by default from Squadron V. The Squadron I keglers posted a 699 team score in the first game against the 648 toppling of the Squadron III team. In the second game A/S Alvin E. Baker paced the Squadron III men to a 686-661 win with a 154 game. A 155 score by A/S Higgins, Squadron I, took top scoring honors of the evening. Squadron I and Squadron V met last night. The scores: forced to receive the mess ribbon on only the bare pole. On another SQUADRON 1 Winder 132 - 138 occasion Squadron Ill’s guidon Freeland 126 - 127 was reported missing, but turned Henwood 147 - 131 up the next day in Squadron IPs Erickson 139 - 131 orderly room. Higgins 155 - To date no light has shown on Woodward - 134 the present mystery, but it ap- — — pears that the departure of Squad- 699 - 661 ron II last Tuesday will figure in the solution. Even when this SQUADRON II mystery is solved, Squadron IV Baker 146 - 154 will remain as the only squadron Seaton 135 - 153 to ever have a ribbon missing Adkius 118 - along with the guidon. Just where Frary 109 - it is no one knows, but it looks Milson 140 - very much as though it will show Plisco - 128 up in San Antonio along with Flynn - 107 Squadron II. At any rate that is Feyes - 144 this reporter’s guess, what’s — — yours ? ? ? ? ? 648 - 686 and still . sending solidly from their performance at the Winf? ball the night befftre, the orches>- tra and the glee club rehearsf3d heavily. At 3 o’clock the Glee club hvar- ried in breathless excitement to Guion, only to be told to scrattn, there was no broadcast scheduled. Upon checking up on the glee club’s report, A/S Joe Bossert, leader of the orchestra, got a dif ferent version. It would be a 15 minute broadcast, at 3:30 p. m. At 3:29, promptly, the orches tra arrived, lugging everythir g but their own piano, and got s t to give forth with some of the bes t for the Texas ether. Only to 7 ie informed by a station official th it the all service show had been broadcast at 3 p. m. If you should see “Baldy Joe” Bossert riding his musical pogo stick down military walk at an 8 to the bar cadence, any kind of a remark will go except one about Sunday’s radio broadcast. jirning for the check out thought)ndant’s Office WTAW/ompany head- ml follows the culprit and his gang. In the end the ring and plot are revealed. A plane crash almost prevents the story from getting to the papers in the United States. The picture is rather old but it was' rated came out. The Lowdown: Thriller good when Next Battalic To Press on This issue of , will be the last on rent semester due t semester holidays gin Friday afternooi through the 4th, the next issue. All news should go in the February 5th, shoul Battalion office in r< Administration Buil noon Thursday, Febi Camera Club Holds Banquet at Sbisa 4-1181 OPENS 1:00 P. A. and M.’s Camera Club held its final social event of the semes ter at Sbisa Banquet room Wed nesday night, January 26, at 6 o clock, Claude Stone, president of the club announced. J. B. Clark, official college photograj>b'w..aj-ui.l head of the Experinwives are invited to attend, photographic laboratoj the principal speaker f * * * ing. His subject will SPECIAL SERVICE: ATTEN- tific aspect of photo TION!!!!! its part in research A display of photos- AS A SPECIAL FEATURE OF bv member n -e JT-XH E BEAVERETTES, THE kicked and squirmed so much there that the higher-ups finally had to send him overseas to make him happy. He was first sent to Khar toum, in the Anglo-Egyptian Su dan, and from there went to his present station “somewhere in Arabia.” A/S Fulton is expecting a coup le more of these patches to be shipped in one of these days, but it seems that his two room-mates have a high priority and the wait ing list is about so long after they get theirs. Your request for one of them probably won’t receive much consideration, but the press seen its duty and done it when they heard that such an affair was hanging around on one of the misters’ blouses. IN EUROPE DEDICATED TO SQUADRON V By Wm. A. Miller Here’s to five feet four Kelly, Flight 52’s stalwart right guide And here’s to six feet four Berrien Who can’t keep up with Kelly’s stride. * * * A salute to Joseph Fredricks, He really is a peach. He knows 11 types of clouds With 10 examples of each. * * * Watch out there, Mr. Lerner Don’t think you are the best Just because you got a high mark In your latest physics test. * * * Palms to the athlete of the year Our own J. O. Knost When the rest reach the finish line He’s still at the post. Who is that handsome lad That tall lady-killer Why no one else but Commander A. H. Miller. * * * “One, two three, four” To all the cadence is known The rest of the flight follows the leader’s But Stallcup has his own! * * * We honor “Colonel” Williams And to him we do decree For his wide experience An honorary B. S. degree. * * * Here’s to Mister Lightstone So very fair and square, Who would rather kill himself Than cheat at solitaire. INSIGNIFICANT ME! By F. D. Wallace I was bom a long time ago. I don’t weigh much although I am quite old. I have seen a great many people come and go in my time. I don’t know who my par ents were, but whoever they were, they had done their job well. In my many years, I have be come a necessity to many; excite ment to some and a goal to be acquired by others. Fools have killed and even die for me. Some had cheated and many lost. Just like every story there are two sides to this one. I have ftiade it possible for many to marry, to buy homes, paid for higher education, and even help those less fortunate. There are many things that I have made possible, which are too numerous to mention. Although I have helped others, I feel now that I would like to be represented in a worthwhile cause . . . for I am the American Dollar. Let me help Uncle Sam buy more bonds. Use me to buy the necessary equipment, material and supplies to speed up Victory. Let me help prosecute this war so that we may return home. Forbidden has been an impor tant word in occupied Europe. For example, it is Verboten to cheer prisoners, sing national songs, listen to foreign broadcasts, read un-German books, insult German soldiers, talk to Jews. A “master race” is naturally inclined to for bid. It is also natural that a master should have only contempt for those he conquers. A Nazi leaflet said: “There are no decent Poles just as there are no decent Jews,” and that belief brought results. It is estimated that more than 3,000,000 Jews have died in Europe since 1939, and the Inter- Allied Information Committee states that of these, some 1,000,000 or more are Poles who have been “slaughtered, starved or beaten to death.” Part of the doctrine of Leben- sraum was to “organize great forced migrations of inferior peo ples. Posterity will be grateful to us. The colonization of the world by the most perfect race is the wisdom of war.” Put into practice that meant round-ups mass arrests and massacres for occupied Europe. In the winter women and children were jammed into cattle cars to be moved across the continent to places more cor venient to the Germans. Thousands of them froze, were trampled un derfoot or died of starvation on the way. It is easy enough to dismiss atrocities as propaganda if you have never seen them, but it is not so easy to deny the facts. German atrocities have been ord ered, calculated and ruthless. The Nazis have murdered and burned when they though it was useful to their plans, having denied “a de cent respect to the opinions of mankind.” And the record grows as they retreat. In Russia, Rostov reported more than 20,000 civil ians “tortured, burned or buried alive,” Kiev reported 50,000 machine-gunned and burned, Smol ensk reported more than 135,000 persons “were killed by the enemy by execution, starvation, neglect Could I be sent to War Bond Drive in now—today? the Fourth your name Commended On Good Work Completed For their splendid work in dec orating the mess hall for the Wing Ball, The Commanding Of- WELCOMING COMMITTEE OF THE BEAVERETTES WILL PLAN TO MEET YOR WIFE, OR SWEETHEART, IN THE EVENT THAT YOU CANNOT MAKE ARRANGEMENTS TO MEET YOUR PARTY. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: MRS. GALLING - 4-359. MRS. TOM EVANS - 4-359. MRS. R. RIESENMY - 4-6614. MEETING- EVENING. EVERY TUESDAY FIRST MEETING AT 6:00 P. M. SECOND MEETING 8:00 P. M. at the YMCA. All wives of the Beavers are cordially invited. There is no charge. WASHINGTON O.P. Pvt. Robert Ming, who recently argued a case before the U. S. Supreme Court on Illinois election laws, is believed to be the first EM to argue a case before the nation’s highest tribunal. Pvt. Ming, formerly a law professor at Howard University and now stationed at Basic Training Cen ter No. 10, Greensboro, N. C., had to get special permission from his CO to appear in court. He wore civies, since custom does not permit attorneys to appear before the Supreme Court in uni form. Ming said the Sad Sack was his favorite nonlegal reading matter. Maj. Gen. Frederick L. Anderson Jr., chief of the VII Bomber Command, told us that Allied bomber attacks on Germany had definitely cut Nazi fighter pro duction 39 percent, and that the bomb tonnage dropped would in crease even though weather ob scured the targets. In fact, he said, new navigation aids are en abling bombers to hit targets through 25,000 feet of clouds. The Bureau of the Budget has given the Veterans Administration top priority rating in acquiring new Civil Service personnel. Just as the load was starting to get heavy for the VA, its headquarters here and its more than 100 offices around the country were hard hit by the draft and by loss of em- ficer commended the following men: Phillip N. Howell, Chairman, Squadron 4; Clarence H. Nelms, Artist, Squadron 4; Rudolph Hart, Sq. 4; Gerald S. Mackey, Sq. 6; Donald A. Landry, Sq. 5; L. J. Brunette, Artist, Sq. 1. The following men were com mended for their part in arrang ing housing facilities: Alvin H. Miller, Squadron Commander, Sq. 5; James E. Murphy, Squadron Commander, Sq. 4; and Ralph E. Otto, 1st Sgt., Squadron 4. or poisoning.” That is only part of the total score which will be added up after the United Na tions are victorious.—Yank. ANNOUNCING SNOOPS BY SCOOP WILL FEATURE INFORMATION OB TAINED BY OBSERVATION, AND THROUGH CHANNELS KNOWN ONLY TO THE CON TACT MEN. WATCH FOR THE FIRST RUN OF ARTICLES TO BE PUBLISHED VERY SOON. EXTRA There was a young man from Law Hall Who had a blind date for the Ball, But when she got here He said with a leer “It’s not what I ordered at all.” ployees who took other jobs. The VA has already hired 922 vets of this war and would take on an ad ditional 4,000 if it could get them. , . Regardless of the priorities that might be set up in local em ployment stabilization plans, the War Manpower Commission says honorably discharged servicemen will be helped to find jobs of their own choice. Travel note: Since July, 1943 more soldiers have been shipped overseas than have been inducted in the Army. . . . The 555th Ser vice Squadron of the Air Service Command, first American-born Chinese unit in the Army, will be followed by two or three similar units.—Yank. LOUPOT’S Watch Dog af th* Affgiaa “Courtesy of Skyways Magazine” You’ll have to go now, Mabel. The wing ball is over.