] PAGE 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 25, 1944 < j i \ i j “Sleepy” Bryant, Class ’31, Earns New Nickname In Normandy Fighting His Aggie nickname is “Sleepy” but he earned something different, according to one of the feature stories of the war recently re ported by famed War Correspond ent Clark Lee covering the French invasion. Lt. Col. Garland R. “Sleepy” Bryant, '31, Temple, was the story’s hero and it’s a fantastic yarn which Sleepy and Mrs. Bryant may have trouble convincing his grand children unless they save some documentary evidence. Colonel Bryant’s jeep took a wrong turn in Normandy and ran into a German strong point where the Colonel,, S/Sgt. John W. Zvon- check, of Marion Heights, Pa., and Pvt. Arthur Evans, of Wheeling, W. Va., were captured. They were placed in the basement of the strong point where they found 23 United States paratroopers also captured and under guard. Using Sgt. Zvoncheck as interpreter, Bryant went to work on the Ger mans and talked his guards into surending and turning over their guns. The paratroopers were arm ed and as additional Germans came into the strong point they were themselves made captives. The final bag was 172 German officers and men. When they ceased com ing into the strong point, Bryant and his little group of Americans started escorting them toward the American lines where they ran into considerable difficulty convincing LOUPOT’S Trade With Lou — He’s Right With You! their own side that they had cap tured so large a number of Ger mans. N Col. Bryant has been awarded the Silver Star for gallantry in action and the Bronze Star for meritorious service. Mrs. Bryant is living at 619 West French Ave., Temple, Texas. Several of Bryant’s old Cavalry friends, particularly “C” Troopers declare that the early training he got in the Cavalry is responsible for his successful and astonishing coup. Former Aggie Catcher Now Pitching In China Jack K. Doran, star Aggie base ball catcher during his college da^s is a pitcher now. He is flying one of the new B-29s in the India- China-Burma theatre and the Japa nese are doing the catching. Cap tain Doran writes that he never realized how much fun it was to pitch. He reports in that area are Lt. James E. McCall ’42, who is a B-29 Navigator, Lt. John Fuller ’41, Major Burt Burns ’40. He also reports seeing Lt. Col. J. T. L. McNew ’20, on leave from A. & M. as Head of the Civil Engi neering Department. Doran has an added incentive to get home—the birth of a son who he has not yet seen. He sends re gards to his classmates and friends from APO 215 NYC. The average height of land above sea level is about 2300 feet. NEATNESS COUNTS Keep looking your best every day by having your clothing cleaned and pressed often at the Campus Clean ers. Having clothes properly cared for helps you keep neat and military. CAMPUS CLEANERS TWO LOCATIONS Over Exchange Store Next to George’s Books Received By College Library General Reading Shall not perish from the Earth, by Ralph Barton Perry. Jacob’s Room, by Virginia Woolf. This Side of Glory, by Gwen Bristow. How To Thing Straight, by I^pb- ert H. Thouless. The Journal of Gamaliel Brad ford, 1883-1932, by Van Wyck Brooks, editor. The Guermantes Way, complete and unabridged in one volume, by Marcel Proust. Darkness at Noon, by Arthur Koestler. Robert Dale Owen, a biography, by* Richard Wiliam Leopold (Har vard Historical Studies 45). Maxim Litvinoff, by Arthur Up- ham Pope. Admiral of the Ocean Sea; a life of Christopher Columbus, by Sam uel Eliot Morison. Makers of Modern Strategy; Military thought from Machiavel- li to Hitler, edited by Edward Mead Earle. Autobiography of John Stuart Mill (world’s Classics No. 262). Joseph and his brothers, by Thomas Mann. U. S. A. The 42nd Parallel Nine teen Nineteen; the big money; all three volumes complete and un abridged in one, by John Dos Passes. Cross Creek, by Marjorie Kin- nan Rawlings. Dragon Seed; a novel of China today, by Pearl S. Buck. Liberal Education, by Mark Van Doren. Lord Ellenborough; a biography of Edward Law, Earl of Ellen borough, Governor-General of Ind ia, by Albert H. Imlah (Harvard Historical Studies 43). J. J. Thomson, by Lord Rayleigh. Anthony Trollope, by Hugh Wal pole (English Men of Letters New Series, edited by J. C. Squire). The Greenwood Hat; being a memoir of James Anon, by J. M. Barrie. The Last 12 years of Joseph Conrad, by Richard Curie. The Early Years of The Satur day Club, 1955-1870, by Edward Waldo Emerson. How to Feel Better and Look it, by Frank T. Kimball and Abbott W. Allen. The Book of Canadian Poetry; a critical and historical anthology, edited with an introduction and notes by A. J. M. Smith. Der Fuehrer; Hitler’s Rise to Power, using sensational new ma terial, the world authority on Hit ler tells the whole story of the Nazi road to chaos, by Konrad Heiden. Man and His Body, by Howard W. Haggard. ABBREVS. (A Dictionary of Ab breviations ( compiled by H. J. S. (Herbert John Stephenson). Religion and Health, by Seward Hiltner. Flying Men and Medicine, by E. Osmum Barr. AStudy of the Functions of Phy sical Education in Higher Educa tion, by Louise Staples Cobb. Mental Health in College, by Clements C. Fry, with the colla boration of Edna G. Rostow. Play Gymnastics, by L. L. Mc- Clow and D. N. Anderson.' The Diagnosis and treatment of Postural Defects, by Phelps-Kip- huth. Body Poise, by Walter Truslok. Beloved Scientist; a guiding spir it of the electrical age, by David O. Woodbury. McQuillen Speaks To Dallas, North American Aggies E. E. McQuillen, president of the Former Student Association, has just returned from an inter esting trip to Dallas where he addressed the Dallas A. & M. Club and the North American A. & M. Club. While attending the meeting of the latter, McQuillen was per mitted to go through the plant. He stated it was like seeing some thing as gigantic and interesting as Grand Canyon. Composed of some seventy-five members, the North American A. & M. Club is presided over by O. G. Rivoire, president. The club publishes its own monthly paper, “The Fighting Aggie”, edited by R. H. Kinkel. The paper keeps the members up to date on the hap penings of the club and the achievements of its members. The club is one of the most unique of the many Aggie clubs. Catalina Gabardine Swim Trunks will give you the maximum in good looks —plus long wear and ex tra comfort. Get into a pair today. $2 to $4 fOaldrop6(o “Two Convenient Stores” College Station -o- Bryan