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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1944)
PAGE 4 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1944 11 a i'.Vn k t a w FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sigrn on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club—Jack & Judy WTAW 7:00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN 7 :15 Toast and Coffee WTAW 7:30 Blue Correspondents BN 7:45 Off the Record WTAW 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9:15 My True Story BN 9:40 Lanny & Ginger BN 9 :45 Between the Lines WTAW 10:00 Breakfast at Sardi's BN 10 :30 Gil Martyn—News BN 10:45 Baby Institute BN 11:00 Noonday Meditation BN 11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN 11:30 National Farm & Home Hr. BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN 12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW 12 :30 Farm Fair WTAW 12 :45 Bunkhouse Roundup WTAW 1 :00 Kiernan’s Corner BN 1:15 The Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey.... BN 2:15 Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:15 Blue Frolics BN 3:30 Time Views the News BN 3 :45 Treasury Star Salute WTAW 4 :00 Something to Read WTAW 4:15 Children’s Story Hour WTAW 4:30 The Sea Hound BN 4 :45 Dick Tracy BN 5:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 6:15 Hop Harrigan BN 5:30 Jack Armstrong BN 5:45 Captain Midnight BN 6:00 Kelly’s Courthouse BN 6:30 Coast Guard Dance Band.... BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7:15 Lum ’n’ Abner BN 7:30 Wake Up America BN 8:00 Wake Up America WTAW 8:30 Sign Off. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club—Jack & Judy WTAW 7 :00 News Summary BN 7:15 Toast and Coffee WTAW 7:30 United Nations News BN 7 :45 Off the Record WTAW 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9 :00 Yankee Doodle Quiz BN 9:30 Ozark Ramblers BN 10:00 On Stage Everybody BN 10:30 Land of the Lost BN 11:00 Blue Playhouse BN 11:25 News Sumrpary BN 11:30 National Farm & Home Hr. BN P. M. 12:00 Report From London BN 12:15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN 12:30 Swing Shift Frolic BN 12:45 Bunkhouse Roundup BN 1:00 Headline News BN 1:02 Women in Blue BN 1:30 Bobby Sherwood’s Roseland Ballroom Orchestra BN 2 :00 Headline News w BN 2:02 Sez You BN 2:30 Minstrel Show BN 3:00 Headline News BN 3:02 Saturday Afternoon Revue.. BN 4:00 Headline News BN 4:02 Concert Orchestra BN 4:45 Hello, Sweetheart BN 5:00 Service Serenade BN 5:15 Storyland Theatre BN 5 :30 Harry Wismer—Sports BN 5:45 Leon Henderson BN 6:00 Those Good Old Days BN 6:30 Music America Loves Best.. BN 7:00 Early Amer. Dance Music.. BN 7:15 Edward Tomlinson BN 7:30 Boston Pops Orchestra BN 8:30 Sign Off. SUNDAY, JUNE 11, 1944 8:00 Blue Correspondents BN 8:15 Coast to Coast on a Bus BN 9:00 The Lutheran Hour WTAW 9 :30 The Southernaires BN 10 :00 Music by Master Composers WTAW 11 :00 Weekly War Journal BN 11:30 College Ave. Baptist Church WTAW P. M. 12:00 John B. Kennedy BN 12:15 Music by Marais BN 12:30 Sammy Kaye’s Tangee Serenade BN 12:55 News Summary BN 1:00 Old Fash. Revival Hour WTAW 2:00 The Life of Kiley BN 2 :30 Hot Copy BN 3 :00 Fun Valley—A1 Pearce BN 3:30 World of Song BN 4:00 Mary Small Revue BN 4:30 Musical Steelmakers BN 5:00 Radio Hall of Fame BN 6:00 Drew Pearson BN 6:15 Dorothy Thompson BN 6:30 Quiz Kids BN 7:00 Greenfield Village Chapel.... BN 7:15 Voice of Andy Russell BN 7:30 Keepsakes BN 8:00 Walter Winchell BN 8:15 Sign off. MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club—Jack & Judy WTAW 7 :00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN 7 :15 Toast and Coffee WTAW 7:30 Blue Correspondents BN 7:45 Off the Record WTAW 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9:00 Sweet River BN Something to Read By T. F. Mayo To Freshmen in War Time The College Library invites you Freshmen to use its books, maga zines, and phonograph records: 105,000 books, 1,200 magazines, and 1,200 classical records. Wherever you may be by this time next year, we believe that you will be a better man at whatever job you have, if during this ses sion you have read three or four good books each semester, and fol lowed current thought through the regular reading of one or two good magazines (without illustrations; you’re grown now.) While we hope that your teach ers will send you to the Library with assignments, we also hope that you will like to spend some of your own free time there. Look over the current numbers of the magazines on the first floor. Don’t confine yourself to Time, Life, and Esquire, (though they are there too), but investigate as many journals as you can, and read some articles in a few of the scientific or technical publications that deal with your chosen field. Pause a while on the second floor before the four display cases, where you will find several hun dred new books on various sub jects—those next to the Loan Desk deal with public questions, tions. Across the front of the third floor is the Browsing Room, with three or four thousand of our most attractive books on open shelves, novels, plays, travel, bio graphy, the war, and a selection of new books on technical and scientific subjects. The Music Room across the way contains a remote- control phonograph, four hundred books about music and musicians, and a card catalogue of our 1,200 DR. N. B. McNUTT DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady’s Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas classical records, which you may check out at the Loan Desk on the same floor, and which we hope you will play to your heart’s content. After all, education even in war time means, among other things, becoming .conscious of the won derful variety and breadth and depth of human experience. The Library offers you the chance to do this. One of you may find this consciousness of the greatness of human experience through the pages of a novel like Tolstoi’s War and Peace. A different boy may get just the right thrill from a closely reasoned article on the origin of species or the TV A. The tremendous climax of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony may make some body else proud of be human. It really doesn’t matter how it comes, just so you realize “what a piece of work is man.” Until you do, you may be trained but you’re not educated. Poultry Course Is Being Taught Here With the first two weeks devot ed to chicken raising problems, and the thiru week to turkey pro duction, the 1944 poultry short course is being conducted at the Texas A. & M. College under the direction of the Poultry Husbandry Department. It opened June 5 and will continue through June 24. A staff of 25 instructors will be used as instructors in the poul try short course. The Texas^ A. & M. College of Veterinary Med icine, Experiment Station and Ex tension Service are cooperating with the Poultry Husbandry De partment to make the short course j of greatest possible value to the poultry industry of Texas. Lec tures on all phases of poultry rais ing are being given each forenoon, and the afternoon are devoted to practice work at the College and Oil Mill Operators Attend Course Here Over 100 cottonseed oil mill op erators from nine cotton produc ing states and Mexico attended the 16th annual short course for cottonseed oil mill men at the Texas A. & M. College May 28- June 2. This short course dedicat ed the new Cottonseed Products Research Laboratory erected through allocation of $50,000 by the Cottonseed Research Commit tee and $13,000 appropriated by the board of directors of the College. Prof. F. F. Bishop of the Depart ment of Chemical Engineering was director of the short course. The short course for cottonseed oil mill operators is held each year by the Department of Chemi cal Engineering of the Texas A. & M. College in cooperation with the Texas Cottonseed Crushers’ Association. For several years the Texas A. & M. College has had a complete cottonseed oil mill and refining equipment housed in the basement of the Chemistry Building. These were presented to the College by the cooperating agency, and addi tional equipment and supplies have been given or loaned from time to time. This mill machinery is in cramped quarters and much of the equipment is out of date. With the completion of the new building and lease-lend agreements which have been signed with many man ufacturers, the new laboratory is expected to be in full and complete operation in a few months. Dr. J. D. Lindsay, nead of the Department of Chemical Engineer ing, announced that the new lab oratory will be used in student instruction in a new course on vegetable oil technology, combin ing part-time schooling at Col lege Station, and part-time work with industry in the field. Experiment Station poultry farms. Subjects being covered in the three-weeks course include culling, feeding, disease and parasite con trol, housing, selection of breeders and general management. 11:5© ©iL©cyi_tf BLUE NETWORK 9:15 My True Story BN 9:40 Lanny & Ginger BN 9 :45 Between the Lines WTAW 10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN 10:30 Gil Martyn—News BN 10:45 Baby Institute BN 11:00 Frontiers of American Life BN 11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN 11:30 National Farm & Home Hr. BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN 12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW 12 :30 Farm Fair WTAW 12 :45 Bunkhouse Roundup WTAW 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner BN 1:16 The Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey.... BN 3:15 Treasury Salute WTAW 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:15 Blue Frolics BN 3 :30 Time Views the News BN 3 :45 Economic Problems—Dr. F. B. Clark WTAW 4:00 Brazos Valley Farm and Home WTAW 4:15 The Vagabonds BN 4:30 The Sea Hound BN 4 :46 Dick Tracy BN 5:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 5:16 Hop Harrigan BN 5 :30 Jack Armstrong BN 5:45 Captain Midnight BN 6:00 Horace Heidt BN 6:30 The Lone Ranger BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7 :15 Lum ’n’ Abner — BN 7:30 Blind Date BN 8 :00 Speaking of Sports WTAW 8:15 Sign off. TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club—Jack & Judy WTAW 7:00 7:15 7:30 7 :45 8:00 9:15 9:40 9:45 10:00 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:15 11:30 P. M. 12:00 12 :15 12:30 12:45 1:00 1:15 1:30 2:00 2:15 2:30 3:00 3:15 3 :30 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 5:15 5:30 5:45 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:15 7:30 8:00 8:15 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal Toast and Coffee Blue Correspondents Off the Record The Breakfast Club My True Story Lanny & Ginger Between the Lines Breakfast at Sardi’s Gil Martyn—News Baby Institute This World of Ours Mid-Morning Melodies National Farm ® Home Hr. BN WTAW- BNH 5 WTAWV BN BN. BN WTAW„ BN BN BN BN WTAW BN Baukhage Talking B,N WTAW Noonday News WTAW Farm Fair WTAW Bunkhouse Roundup WTAW„ Kiernan’s Corner BN The Mystery Chef BN Ladies Be Seated BN Songs by Morton Downey.... BN Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN Appointment with Life BN Ethel and Albert Blsl^ Treasury Salute WTAW* Time Views the News BN Know Your Stated- Dr. Ralph Steen WTAW Brazos Valley F.S.A WTAW Three Romeos BN The Sea nound BN Dick Tracy BN*' Terry and the Pirates BN Hop Harrigan BN Jack Armstrong BN Captain Midnight BN Let Yourself Go B1L The Green Hornet BN Watch the World Go By BN Lum ’n’ Abner BN Duffy’s Tavern BiNl Speaking of Sports.. WTAW Sign off. Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood Questions on how to manage specific foods are not limited to the unusual foods. For instance, catchup—you’ll find it on almost all restaurant tables where steaks are served but, common as it may seem, it is admittedly hard to use without making an unsightly mess of your plate; food authorities say to use it sparingly in any case. A person with a properly cultivat ed taste for good meat, likes his meat to have a meat flavor, he doesn’t like all meats to taste alike, especially all like catchup! Since catchup is too thin to eat in separate bites as you would chili sauce, jelly or relish, the next best thing is to eat a small bit with a bite of meat. When you help your self to catchup, pour a small por tion at the side of your meat, and then transfer a little of it with your fork to each individual bite of meat as you eat it. If, on a separate platter, you are served a whole steak or a larger portion than you would nor-* mally put on your dinner plate,' cut off half or a third of it and transfer it to your plate, use your„ own knife and fork, if no other- implements are provided, to cut and lift it to your own plate. If you still feel that a beautiful steak* needs catchup, use it sparing!^ lest you offend a table companion. Both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans can be seen from the top of Mt. Irazu in Costa Rica. LOUPOT’S A Little Place . . . ... A Big Saving! DROP IN ANYTIME for Drinks... Sandwiches... Smokes... GEORGE’S New Area “Y”