s PAGE 6 THE BATTALION TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 27, 1944 W T A W Batt Chat Replicas of the fighter planes that slash at each other in the Pa cific combat area are now avail able to listeners of Jack Arm strong, the All-American Boy, broadcast Mondays through Fri days over the Blue Network at 5:30-5:45 p.m., CWT. In exchange for two Wheaties box tops each listener is offered realistic models of the P6F Grum man Hellcat, carrier-borne U. S. Navy fighter, and the Nakajima, pursuit ship of the Japanese Im perial Air Force. Plans for the models were de signed by Fred D. Myers, Connec- LISTEN TO WT AW 1150 kc — B (Blue Network) WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Pro*. 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 Records WTAW 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9 :16 My True Story BN 9:40 Aunt Jemima BN 9:45 Between the Lines WTAW 10 :00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN 10:30 Gil Martyn BN 10:45 Baby Institute BN 11:00 Building Morale BN 11:16 Meet Your Neighbor BN 11:30 Farm and Home Makers BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN 12:16 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 Treasury Salute WTAW 3:30 Time Views the News BN 3 :45 Our Neighbor Mexico— Dr. A. B. Nelson WTAW 4:00 Rev. Hartmann (Lutheran)..WTAW 4 :16 The Vagabonds BN 4:80 The Sea Hound BN 4:46 Dick Tracy BN 5:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 6:16 Hop Harrigan BN 6:30 Jack Armstrong — BN 5:46 Captain Midnight. BN 6:00 Connie Boswell Show BN 6:80 The Lone Ranger BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7:15 Lum 'n’ Abner BN 7:30 My Best Girls BN 8:00 Speaking of Sports WTAW 8:15 Sign off. A. M. 6:00 6:02 6:16 7:00 7:15 7:80 7:45 8:00 9:15 9:40 9:45 10:00 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:16 11:30 P. M. 12:00 12:15 12:80 12 :45 1:00 1:16 1:80 2:00 2:15 2:30 8:00 8:15 8:80 8:45 4:00 4:15 4:80 4:45 5:00 6:15 6:80 5:45 6:00 6:80 7:00 7:15 7:80 8:00 8:80 THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1944 Sign on. Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW Sunup Club—Jack A Judy WTAW Martin Agronaky— Daily War Journal BN Toast and Coffee. WTAW Blue Correspondents BN Off the Record WTAW The Breakfast Club BN My True Story BN Aunt Jemima— BN Between the Lines WTAW Breakfast at Sardi’s BN Gil Martyn BN Baby Institute BN The Changeless Bible. BN Meet Your Neighbor BN Farm and Home Makers BN Baukhage Talking BN 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 BN Treasury Salute. —WTAW Time Views the News BN Something to Read— Student IPersonnell—George Wilcox WTAW Three Romeos BN The Sea Hound BN Dick Tracy — — BN Terry and the Pirates BN Hop Harrigan - — BN Jack Armstrong BN Captain Midnight BN Musical Mysteries BN Summer Swing BN Watch the World Go By BN The Parker Family BN America’s Town Meeting of the Air BN Speaking Sports WTAW Sign Off. ticut artist who recently fulfilled a commission for the U. S. Navy, painting enemy and United Na tions planes. Before the models were offered via the Jack Arm strong series, they were thorough ly tested by youngsters to assure ease of assembly. There are still a few of the airplane models left at the WTAW studios. These may be obtained simply by sending your name and address, together with two Wheaties box tops and five cents to cover cost of mailing, to WTAW, College Station. * * * Daytime radio audiences will be treated to a new kind of progr^p, combining audience participation and comedy, when a Monday through Friday series, titled Glam our Manor, makes its bow over the entire Blue Network, Monday, July 3. Glamour Manor is the name of a mythical hotel recently inherit ed by Cliff Arquette, well-known radio comedian. Arquette, whose middle name is versatility, will m.c. the program, play character parts, and write much of his own material. The show^ comedy corner will be highlighted on Mondays, Wed nesdays and Fridays, with inci dents involving the manoFs thirty- three delightful but dilapidated rooms and the odd assortment of guests who live in them. The other two days will be “Ladies Day” at the manor, with studio audiences participating in contests and quizzes. Cash will be the reward for correct answers, and penalties the price of wrong answers. Charles Dane and his 12-piece orchestra, with a male vocalist, will provide the musical back ground. Comedy players and two announcers will round out the cast. * * * Excerpt from the diary of Harve Fischman, 13, who has kept a daily record of events since he made his debut with the Blue Network’s Quiz Kids three years ago: “The Hollywood Canteen looks like a girl in slacks . . . pretty from the front, awful from the rear.” * * * Despite the recent warnings from the O.D.T., eleven velvet voiced choristers will, musically speaking, be “Alabamy Bound” on the Blue Network broadcast of the Aunt Jemima Show, Thursday, June 29, at 9:40 a.m., CWT. The melodic trip will be followed by a Palmer Clark arrangement of “Moonglow.” On Friday, June 30, the chorus, under the direction of Harry Walsh, will ask “Is It True What They Say About Dixie?” and then tell listeners what is found “Over the Rainbow.” * * * Formal opening of the swim ming pool that Tom Breneman and his fans have provided for the Hollywood Guild Canteen will climax the gala Fourth of July festivities to be staged for service personnel by the renowned Blue Network program, Breakfast at Sardi’s. Beginning with the regular Breakfast at Sardi’s broadcast at 10:00 a.m., CWT, Tuesday, July 4, the day will be given over to feting members of the armed forces who will spend the holiday in the film city. The Fourth of July broadcast will mark the eighth time that Breakfast at Sardi’s has been de voted exclusively to men and wom en who wear khaki, olive drab and navy blue. Each guest receives $5.00, in addition to special awards. On the afternoon of the Fourth, Breneman will preside as host at a giant barbecue and show to be held near the new swim pool on the grounds of the Ann Lehr estate, where the Hollywood Guild Canteen is located. The affair will culminate in the formal opening of the pool. Built by the Paddock Engineer ing Co., at a cost of $10,000, the pool is 60 by 30 feet and is com plete to runway, springboards and other equipment. Money for the project has been contributed partly by the management of Breakfast at Cardi’s and partly from the surplus in the fund donated by the program’s daily guests for the spe cial Sardi’s broadcasts for service personnel. (Breakfast at Sardi’s, with Tom Breneman as host, is broadcast over the Blue Network Mondays through Fridays at 10 a.m., CWT. ★ * * Overcoming the opposition of superstitious Indians, Ruggles, a photographer, “shoots” the natural phenomena of Yellowstone and thereby causes complications which the Masked Horseman unravels during the Blue Network • broad cast of the Lone Ranger drama titled “Ruggles of Yellowstone,” Wednesday, June 28, at 6:30 p.m., CWT. * * * The Blue Network’s Blind Date program will be seen on the screen, too, when the show takes a fling in vaudeville shortly. Scheduled for the RKO Theatre in Boston for one week beginning June 26, the broadcast that eve ning will be introduced by a movie montage picturing the way the program is conducted. Sound-track will be announced by Jimmy Wallington, who de scribes the show on the air. * * * A serenade to a slip-horn will be voiced by the Four Vagabonds on their Blue Network program of songs, Wednesday, June 28, at 4:15-4:30 p.m., CWT, when they proclaim “There’s an Awful Lotta Rhythm in a Slide Trombone.” The four mellow fellows also will chant “Slow Down,” “Just a Dream of You,” “Yours,” and the Dorsey cantata, “Can’t Get Stuff in Your Cuff.” * * * On a recent Blue Network Blind Date show, lovely Joanne Sheer was telling Marine Corp. Pasquale Franco over the telephone the type of man she’d like to date. Said she: “The man of my dreams must be true, square and upright.” Without fluttering an eyelash, the Marine replied, “Lady, you don’t want a man, you want a piano!” When the sun has gone down, the surface of the ground loses its heat at a much more rapid rate than does the surrounding air. LOUPOT’S Watch Dog of the Aggies New Professor Added To Chemistry Dept. Employment of C. G. Kirkbride as professor of chemical engineer ing, Texas A. & M. College was announced today by Dr. J. D. Lind say, head of the department. Mr. Kirkbride’s work will con sist of expansion of chemical en gineering graduate instruction, ex pansion of research work leading to master of science and doctor of philosophy degrees in chemical en gineering, and expansion of co operative research projects with industrial organizations, according to Dr. Lindsay. The research work will be directed toward economical utilization of the many natural re sources of the state of Texas. Kirkbride is a BS and MS grad- and since graduation in 1930 has served in the research departments of Standard Oil of Indiana, Pan American Refining Corporation at Texas City and Magnolia Petrol eum Company, Dallas. His experience included process design, technical service, pilot plant development and economic apprais als of heat transmission, distilla tion, thermal cracking, catalytic cracking, alkylation, isomerization, polymerization and allied fields, as well as teaching advanced courses in chemical engineering in the En gineering, Science, Management War Training program. Mr. Kirkbride is a member of the American Institute of Chemi cal Engineers, American Petroleum Institute and American Chemical uate of the University of Michigan Society. J1 fur-storage: matters Mean 214 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN, TEXAS THE A. & M. PHOTO SHOP is pleased to announce that in addition to their regu lar fine portrait and commercial photography, they have added a complete stock of supplies for AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS f^r the convenience of the students and personnel of the college and this vicinity who are interested in amateur photography. We have the largest and most complete stock of this type in this area, featuring the Eastman and Ansco brands, and including Flash Bulbs Film Packs Cut Film Bulk 35mm Film Enamel and Rubber Developing Trays (any size) Toners White Rubber Print Rollers Squeegie Boards (all sizes) We invite you to inspect our stock and supply your needs . . . and REMEMBER, for the finest studio portrait work, we invite you to use the facil ities of our shop. A. & M. PHOTO SHOP North Gate Next Door to Kelley's DO YOUR PART * Buy WAR BONDS * -r’ * l m