THE BATTALION
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 16, 1945
PAGE 4
TAW
W tatt Chat
B ! 1
the Sweetwater Express is
* of $160,000 in new curren-
An e x' d the Lone Ranger’s presence
which t mas j ce d identity make him a
WTA^p ec t ( D an R e id and Tonto, the
take^TAW’s Masked Horseman’s sad-
wor dlemates, come to his aid. The ex-
^ citing Lone Ranger episode, titled
“The Sweetwater Express,” will
be broadcast Monday, February 19,
at 6:30 p. m., CWT.
* * *
Beulah Karney, top-notch home
maker, declares that squeamish
ness in cooking is passe and com
petent cooks now use lambs liver
in place of calves liver and think
nothing of using chicken feet when
planning a Strassburg aspic.
On her What’s Cookin’ program
to be broadcast over WTAW Sat
urday, February 17, at 9:00 a. m.,
CWT, Miss Karney will present new
practical ideas for reducing every
one’s grocery bills and new recipes
of interest to every housewife.
Earle Tanner, tenor, accompanied
by the Musical Chefs, will sing
“After a While,” “Look For the
Silver Lining,” “At the Balalaika”
and “Poor Little Rhode Island.”
A skit portraying the complex
ities resulting from a youngster’s
inferiority complex will be enacted
on the dramatic portion of the
program.
* * *
Bob Hope’s talkative foil, Vera
Vague, will visit the Andrews Sis
ters’ musical ranch during the
. Andrews Sisters Show, Sunday,
February 18, at 3:30 p. m., CWT,
over WTAW.
Figuring that ’’Any man is bet
ter than none at all,” Vera will
campaign for George (Gabby)
Hayes’ affections during the pro
gram. “Gabby,” . heavily bearded
Western picture star, is heard
weekly on the program.
Patty Andrews’ solo offering
will be “That Old Feeling.” The
trio will sing “Victory Polka,” “I’m
In Love with You, Honey,” “There
Is Gonna Be a Great Day,” “The
Old Square Dance is Back Again,”
and one of their latest and most
popular recording hits, “Three Ca
balleros.”
Accompanying the girls will be
Vic Schoen’s orchestra. Foy Wil
ling and his Riders of the Purple
Sage will feature a Western come
dy. Marvin Miller announces the
program, while Patty Andrews
presides as mistress of ceremonies.
* * *
Edward Tomlinson, the WTAW’s
authority on Latin-American af
fairs, has been assigned to Mexico
City to cover the Conference of
American Republics which will be
gin February 25.
Tomlinson will report on the
plans of the conference direct from
Mexico City on his regular broad
cast, Saturday, February 17, at
5:30 p. m., CWT, and will devote
about four minutes to his remarks
on the meeting as his contribution
to the BLUE Network’s Weekly
War Journal, Sunday, February 18,
at 11:00 a. m„ CWT. He will
broadcast subsequent reports from
DR. N. B. McNUTT
DENTIST
Office in Parker Building
Over Canady’s Pharmacy
Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas
EXPERT SHOE
REPAIRING
Make those rationed
shoes last longer by
bringing them for
needed repairs to
HOUCK’S
BOOT SHOP
We use only the best
material available.
Makers of Fine
Boots
We have served the Aggies
for over 50 years
At the North Gate
Mexico City through Sunday, March
4.
The Conference of American Re
publics, concerned with urgent war
and post-war problems, will in
clude delegates from every nation
in the western hemisphere, except
Argentina and El Salvador. Secre
tary of State Edward R. Stettinius
will head the United States dele
gation, with Nelson A. Rockefeller
as alternate.
* * *
Charlotte Greenwood befriends
a lonely high school lad during the
Charlotte Greenwood Show, Sun
day, February 18, from 2:00 to
2:30 p. m., CWT, over WTAW.
The boy, unpopular with his fel
low students, has developed a seri
ous inferiority complex, and Miss
Greenwood attempts to alter his
outlook by persuading him to enter
an essay contest. Her efforts near
ly prove disastrous when the lad
misses out completely in the con
test, but result in a happy climax.
Musical interludes on the broad
cast will be furnished by Charles
Dant’s orchestra. Supporting Miss
Greenwood will be John Brown,
Eddie Ryan and Betty Moran.
* * *
Marie MacDonald, star of the
forthcoming 20th Century-Fox film
“Guest in the House,” will be a
featured guest star on the Mary
Small-Junior Miss Show, Sunday,
February 18, at 4:00 p. m., CWT,
over WTAW.
Miss MacDonald will take part
in the “Junior Miss’ ’episode dur
ing the broadcast, appearing with
regulars Betty Philsom and Pert
Kelton.
For the musical portion of the
program Mary Small and Sunny
Skylar will offer solos and duets,
backed by music of Ray Bloch’s or
chestra and chorus.
* * *
Under-Secretary of State Joseph
C. Grew will be the speaker over
WTAW on Saturday, February 17,
at the Metropolitan Opera “Victory
Rally.” Grew will be heard during
the second intermission, at 2:34
p. m., CWT, of Verdi’s “La Travi-
ata.” His subject will be related
to the general theme of this year’s
rallies, “The Fight for Peace.”
Milton J. Cross, announcer-com
mentator, will conduct his “Opera-
Column of the Air” at the first in
termission, 1:42 p. m. CWT. The
weekly Opera Forum Quiz with
Olin Downes as quizmaster will be
heard at 3:13 p. m., CWT. The
Opera will begin at 1:00 p. m.,
CWT with the final curtain sched
uled for 4:07 p. m., CWT.
Licia Albanese, Jan Peerce and
Lawrence Tibbet will sing the prin
cipal roles in “La Traviata,” with
Cesare Sodero conducting. The
Opera broadcasts are sponsored
by the Texas Company.
* * *
Bob Hope, ace funnyman of the
films and radio, will serve as m.c.
of Philco’s Radio Hall of Fame,
Sunday, February 18, at 5:00 p. m.,
CWT, over WTAW.
In the all-star cast with Hope
will be Judy Canova, Janet Blair,
and a trio of habitues from Duffy’s
Tavern—Charlie (Finnegan) Can
tor, Eddie (The Waiter) Green,
and the bistro’s baritone, Robert
Graham.
Paul Whiteman's orchestra will
supply the music for the full-hour
broadcast, which originates in Earl
Carroll’s theater-restaurant in Hol
lywood.
* * *
Father Flanagan of Boy’s Town
has posed a stumper of a “spot
light question” for the Quiz Kids
on the WTAW broadcast Sunday,
February 18, at 6:30 p. m., CWT.
The broadcast will originate at
Topeka, Kansas, at the request of
Milton Eisenhower, brother of Gen
eral Dwight Eisenhower and Pres
ident of Kansas State College. The
Topeka program is being held to
raise funds for a World War II
Memorial Library and will include
the “War Bond Team” of Ruthie
Duskin, 10, Richard Williams, 15,
Joel Kupperman, 8, and Harve
Fischman, 14, who have visited 24
cities and raised $93,000,000 in War
Bonds. The fifth member of the
team will be Patrick Conlon, 7,
who is making his first War Bond
trip.
* * *
Irving Berlin’s 1932 hit, “Say It
Isn’t So,” and one of the promising
hits of 1945, “Poor Little Rhode
Island,” will be intoned by Bari
tone Curley Bradley, accompanied
by the Home Towners under Rex
Maupin’s direction, on WTAW’s
Farm and Home Makers program
Monday, February 19, at 11:30
a. m., CWT.
The Four Cadets will vocalize
their interpretation of “Hail and
Farewell” and “I’d Love to Live
in Dreamland,” and the Harmoni-
zers, melodic string sextet, will
present “Papillion Polka” and
“Please Think of Me.”
Ace Homemaker Kay Baxter
and Mirandy, the philosopher of
Persimmon Holler, will be on hand.
Books Received By
College Library
English and Journalism:
The Shakespeare Apocrypha; a
collection of fourteen plays which
have been ascribed to Shakespeare,
by C. F. Tucker Brooke.
English Critical Essays, XIX
Century.
The New Pitfalls in English;
revised edition, containing hundreds
of additional points, by Sophie C.
Hadida.
Uncollected Lectures, by Ralph
Waldo Emerson.
Journalistic Vocations; revised
edition, by Charles Elkins Rogers.
Collected Edition of Heywood
Broun, compiled by Heywood H.
Broun.
Science, Pure and Applied:
The Eugenic Predicament; out-
LISTEN TO
WTAW
1150 kc.—(Blue Network)
SATURDAY
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW
7 :00 News Summary , BN
7:15 Arlo at the Organ BN
7:30 United Nations News BN
7:45 Off the Record WTAW
8 :00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 What’s Cooking- BN
9:25 News Summary BN
9:30 Land of the Lost BN
10:00 Kay’s Canteen BN
10:15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN
10:30 Land of the Lost BN
11:00 Swingshift Frolics BN
11:05 WTAW NEWS WTAW
11:30 Nat’l Farm & Home Hour BN
P. M.
12:00 Eddie Condon’s Jazz Concert BN
12:15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN
12:30 Farm FainrPEM
12:30 Farm Fair WTAW
12 :40 Bunkhouse Roundup WTAW
12 :45 Luncheon Tunes WTAW
1:00 Metropolitan Opera BN
5:00 Vladimir Brenner BN
6:15 Harry Wismer—Sports BN
5 :30 Edward Tomlinson BN
5:45 Labor USA BN
6:00 Blue Correspondents Abroad BN
6:15 Children’s Vesper Hour WTAW
6:30 Meet Your Navy BN
7:00 Sign Off
SUNDAY
A. M.
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. Bapt. Church....WTAW
P. M.
12:00 John B. Kenedy BN
12:16 George Hicks BN
12:30 Sammy Kaye’s Tangee
Serenade BN
12:55 Your Sunday News Extra.... BN
1:00 Old Fash. Revival Hour....WTAW
2:00 Listen, the Women BN
2:30 Miss Hattie BN
3:00 Darts for Dough BN
3 :30 Set To Music BN
4:00 Mary Small Revue BN
4 :S0 Met. Opera Presents BN
5:00 Radio Hall of Fame BN
6:00 Drew Pearson BN
6:15 Week of Review WTAW
6 :30 Quiz Kids—
7:00 Sign Off
MONDAY
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6:15 Sunup Club WTAW
7:00 Martin Agronsky—
Daily War Journal , BN
7 :15 Your Life Today BN
7:30 Blue Correspondents BN
7 :45 Morning Melodies WTAW
7 :55 Hollywood Headliners WTAW
8:00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 My True Story BN
9:25 Music for Moderns WTAW
9 :30 Between The Lines WTAW
7:45 Rosa Rio at the Organ BN
10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN
10:30 Gyl Martin BN
10:45 Jack Berch and His Boys .... BN
11:00 Glamour Manor BN
11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN
11:30 Farm and Home Makers BN
P. M.
12 :00 Baukhage Talking BN
12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW
12:30 Farm Fair WTAW
12:45 Songs By Pta Marsh BN
1:00 John B. Kennedy BN
1:15 Mystery Chef BN
1:30 Ladies, Be Seated BN
2:00 Blue Correspondents BN
2:15 Yours Alone BN
2 :30 Appointment With Life BN
2:45 Yours Alone BN
3:00 Time Views The News BN
3:15 That’s For Me BN
3:30 Report from Abroad BN
3 :45 Church of Christ WTAW
4:00 Brazos Valley Farm& Home WTAW
4:15 Dick Tracy BN
4:30 To Be Announced
4 :46 Hop Harrigan BN
6:00 Terry and the Pirates BN
6:15 Treasury Salute WTAW
6:30 Jack Armstrong BN
6:45 Capt. Midnight BN
6:00 Six o’Clock News Journal ..WTAW
6:15 Raymond Gram Swing BN
6 :30 The Lone Ranger—-
7:00 Sign Off
TUESDAY
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW
7:00 Martin Agronsky—
Daily War Journal BN
7:16 Your Life Today BN
7:30 Blue Correspondents BN
7:45 Rosa Rio at the Organ BN
8:00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 My True Story BN
9 :25 Music for Moderns WTAW
9:30 Between the Lines WTAW
7:45 Rosa Rio at the Organ BN
10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’t BN
10:30 Gil Martyn BN
10 :45 Jack Berch and His Boys .... BN
11:00 Glamour Manor BN
11:15 Mid-Morning Melodies .WTAW
11:30 Farm and Home Makers.... BN
P. M.
12:00 Baukhage Talking BN
12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW
12 :30 Farm Fair WTAW
12 :40 Texo Roundup .WTAW
12 -.45 Carole O’Hara BN
1:00 John B. Kennedy BN
1:15 Mystery Chef BN
1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN
2:00 Blue Correspondents BN
2:15 Yours Alone BN
2:30 Appointment With Life BN
2 :45 Sincerely Yours BN
3:00 Time Views The News BN
3:15 That’s for Me BN
3 :30 Report from Abroad BN
3:45 Keys of Faith .WTAW
4:00 Voice of the Army BN
4:15 Dick Tracy BN
4:30 To Be Announced
4:45 Hop Harrigan BN
B :00 Terry and the Pirates BN
5 :15 Excursions in Science WTAW
5:30 Jack Armstrong ... BN
6 :45 Captain Midnight. BN
6:00 Six o’Clock News Journal „WTAW
6:15 Raymond Gram Swing BN
6:30 One Man’s Family BN
7:00 Sign Off
LOUPOT’S
A LITTLE PLACE - - -
; - - A BIG SAVING!
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Classified
Church Notices
FOR SALE—1 pair boots, size 8% or 9,
spurs, boot hooks, boot pants. Dorm No.
5, Room 428. Stubby Matthews.
FOR SALE—Pre-war bike and tires,
with luggage carrier and pump. C. B.
Campbell, Academic 125.
REWARD—For return of officers gray
long coat, size 40, lost or taken from C-7
Hart, Tuesday, 6 February. Label from
Westwood Village, California. Merchant
owner’s name thereon, LT. C. W. HETH-
ERINGTON, 0778148, U.S.A.A.F. Coat had
buttoned-in, tan, woolen lining. No ques
tions will be asked. Return to C-4 Hart.
ROOM FOR RENT—Near AAA Build
ing, all conveniences adjoining bath.
Moderate price. Telephone 4-1172 after
5 p.m.
LOST—A brown leather billfold on Wed
nesday, February 7. Finder may keep
money, but please return billfold as it
contains important personal papers.
Dan McGurk, Rm. 318, Dorm. 7.
FOR SALE—Ice cream boot pants, Zubik
made, practically new. See D. A. Ballard,
Room 427, No. 5.
Meetings
SOCIAL AT BAPTIST CHURCH—All
Baptist students and those who prefer the
Baptist Church have a special invitation
to attend a Party Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
in the social rooms of the Educational
building of the First Baptist Church of
College Station. All new students are urged
to attend so we can get acquainted with
you.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH •
R. L. Brown, Pastor
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
5:00 p.m. Fellowship Hour.
6:00 p.m. Training Union
7:00 p.m. Evening Worship
A cordial invitation is extended to all
who desire to worship with us.
COLLEGE AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH
203 N. College Ave.
J. H. Landes, Pastor
9 :45 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship Service
6 :15 Training Union
7:30 Evening Worship Service
THE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Corner Twenty-seventh and S. College
F. J. Smythe. Faster
10 :00—Sunday School
11:00—Communion and Worship
6 :00—Recreation Hour
7 :00—Christian Youth Fellowship
8 :00—Communion and Sermon
A cordial welcome awaits all who at
tend this church.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
R. B. Sweet, Pastor
Sunday. 9 :45 Bible classes ; 10 :45 t
morning worship; 7 p.m. the evening wor
ship.
Wednesday 7:15 p.m. the Prayer Meet
ing.
All are invited to attend all these serv
ices. You will be most welcome.
CATHOLIC STUDENTb
Sunday Masses 9:15 and 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Mass 7:00 p.m.
Confession Saturday 6 :30 to 7 :30 p.m.;
Sunday, before Mass.
A cordial invitation is extended to all
who desire to attend the revival at the
First Baptist Church. Services will begin
Sunday morning and continue throughout
the week. Dr. Wallace Bassett, Dallas, Tex-
will be the guest speaker. He has a
dynamic message for all.
Commandants Office
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
General Order No. 18:
1. With the approval of the PRESI
DENT, the following schedule of calls is
announced for A. & M. Cadets ONLY, ef
fective at FIRST CALL FOR RETREAT,
TUESDAY, February 13th, 1945:
1st Call—Daily, 6:45 a.m.; Sunday, 7:20
i.m.
Reveille—Daily, 6:55
Vssei
Sunday
Assembly-
Daily,
•—Daily
(Roll Call) ;
mday, 7 :27 a.m.
Mess Call—Daily, 7 :00 a.m.; Sunday, 7 :30
a.m.
Mess Call—Daily 12:00 p.m.; Sunday
12 :20 p.m.
Assembly—Daily 12 :13 p.m.; Sunday,
12 :25 p.m.
1st Call.
Retreat Daily 6 :37 p.m. ; Saturday,
5 :26 p.m. ; Sunday, 5 :25 p.m.
Assembly—Daily 6:40 p.m.; Saturday,
5 :27 p.m. ; Sunday, 5 :25 p.m.
Retreat—Daily 6 :44 p.m. ; Saturday, 5 :30
p.m. ; Sunday, 5 :30 p.m.
Mess Call-—Daily Immediately after Re-
Immediately after Re
eat ;
treat.
Call
to Quarters—Daily, 7 :25
) p.n
night; Sunday, 8 :25 p.r
Assembly—Daily 7 :30
ay,
Ta
p.r
:25
p.m.
Wed:
p.m. ;
8:(
m.
5 I
y, 11:00 p.m. ;
.m.; Saturday, 12 :30 p.m. ;
Wednes-
p.m.;
Wednesday, 8 :40 p.m.; Saturday, 12 :00 mid-
;; Si
semb
8:45
ttoo-
i p.r
ps—1
1 P-)
11:30 p.m.
Sunday, 8:30
10 :i
day,
11:00
.m.;
p.m.
Wednesday,
Sun-
p.m.
attoo—Daily, 10 :55
11 :25 p.m. ; Sur
Taps—Daily
11 :3C
day,
By order of, the COMMANDANT.
JOE E. DAVIS,
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
nesday,
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
Circular No. 35 :
1. Effective immediately upperclassmen
will not enter Dormitory No. 2, which is
cupied by new students, without permis-
tory
occupied by new students,
sion
2. Effective immediately new students
will not enter any of the dormitories oc
cupied by upperclassmen.
3. Cadets will not enter dormitories oc
cupied by service men.
By order of »the COMMANDANT.
JOE E. DAVIS,
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
Memorandum:
1. The following- named students :
in charge of dormitory lights:
MURNANE, T. G.—No. 5-128
Dormitories No. 2, 4, and 5.
RAPLEE, R. G.—No. 9-301
Dormitories No. 7, 9 and 11.
By order of the COMMANDANT.
JOE E. DAVIS,
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
Circular No. 36:
1. All motor vehicles owned by students
will be registered in the Commandant’s Of
fice. Those students living in the new
dormitory area will park their cars in the
ormitory
arking 1
par
it
parking lot adj
and north of the Academic Building.
2. Cars will not be driven to and from
class, and at no time will they be parked
n the streets.
By order of the COMMANDANT.
JOE E. DAVIS,
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
Circular No. 37:
1. Bicycles will be parked in racks
been provided adjacent to dorm-
that have
itories and classroi
of the (
JOE E. DAVIS,
By order of the
oms.
COMMANDANT.
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
Circular No. 38:
1. The garrison cap (over-seas cap) will
be worn at all times with the number 2
and lab, uniform except during inclement
weather when the -campaign hat is auth
orized.
2. No branch insignia will be worn
on the cap or campaign hat.
3. Non-military students who are re-
’ to wear the uniform will conform
rules and regulations pertaining to
quired
to all
military courtesy.
4. The khaki tie only is authorized for
'ear with the cadet uniform.
By order of the COMMANDANT.
JOE E. DAVIS,
Major, Infantry
Assistant Commandant.
ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
Rev. J. T. R. Farrell, Chaplain
First Sunday in Lent
Holy Communion, 9:00 a.m.
Coffee Club, 9:30 a.m.
Church School, 9:45 a.m.
Morning Prayer, 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday, Holy Communion, 10 a.m.
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
CONGREGATION
Y. M. C. A. Chapel, Campus
Kurt Hartman, Pastor
Sunday School at 9:45
Student Bible <
Class
iod at 9:45 a..m
Divine Services 11:00
i a.m.
id Discussion
a. m.
A. & M. METHODIST CHURCH
AND WESLEY FOUNDATION
Rev. R. C. Terry
Sunday:
Church School—9 :45 a.m.
Morning Worship—10 :50 a.m.
Wesley Foundation—7 p.m.
Wednesday:
Choir Practice—6 :45 p.m.
Wesley Fellowship and Midweek Devo
tional—7 p.m.
The A. and M. Methodist Church is one
block east of the Post Office at the North
Gate.
A. & M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Norman Anderson, Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 in the Campus
Theatre. “By courtesy of the Management.’
Morning Worship 11:00 in the Campus
Theatre. “By courtesy of the Management.’’
Student League 6 :30 in the Y. M. C. A.
Chapel.
Student Forum 7:30 in the Y. M. C. A.
Chapel.
story of a hero and statesman, by
Emile Dard.
The Signers of the Texas Decla
ration of Independence, by Louis
W. Kemp.
From Despotism to Revolution
1763-1789; the rise of modern Eu
rope, by Leo Gershoy.
Social Studies:
International Law and Diplo
macy in the Spanish Civil Strife,
by Norman J. Padelford.
The Modern Case for Socialism,
by John Putnam.
Democracy Days, compiled and
edited by Hilah Paulmier and Ro
bert H. Schauffler.
Order of the Day; political es
says and speeches of two decades,
by Thomas Mann.
Gauging Public Opinion, by Had
ley Cantril.
Hoy to Tell Progress from Re
action; roads to industrial demo
cracy, by Manya Gordon.
The Condition of Man; tells of
the development of the personality
and the community, by Lewis Mum-
ford.
An Amercian Dilemma; the ne
gro probleip and modern Democra
cy, by Gunnar Myrdal.
Society and Nature; a study in
intellectual history, by Hans Kel-
sen.
Institutions Serving Children, by
Howard W. Hopkirk.
Prospects and Policies; speeches
and papers by England’s Minister
of Home Security and Secretary of
State for Home Affairs on war
time problems and post-war plans,
by Herbert Morrison.
World Revolutionary Propagan
da, by Harold Lasswell and Doro
thy Blumenstock.
The Seven Myths of Housing;
the discussion of the post-war
housing problem, by Nathan Straus
Total War; the economic theory
of a war economy, by John Burn
ham.
Aggie-Ex Receives
Fourth Oak Leaf
Cluster to Air Medal
A fourth Oak Leaf Cluster to
his Air Medal has been awarded
to First Lieutenant William A.
Sanders, Jr., 27, Cleburne, Texas,
for “meritorious achievement”
while participating in bombing
missions to military and industrial
targets in Germany.
Lt. Sanders is the pilot of an
Eighth Air Force B-17 Flying
Fortress in the 385th Bombard
ment Group commanded by Colonel
George Y. Jumper, Natona, Calif.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. William A.
Sanders, Sr., Route 3, Cleburne, he
is a graduate of Cleburne High
School, and attended Texas A. and
M. College. His wife, the former
Miss Eugenia L. Locker, lives at
416 West Henderson Street, Cle
burne, with their young daughter.
He entered the Army in September,
1941, served as an infantry officer
until 1943, and received his wings
at Stockton, California, in Janu
ary, 1944.
Every year preventable forest
fires in the United States destroy
or damage timber of sufficient
amount to build five-room houses
for the entire population of a city
the size of Denver, Portland, Seat
tle, San Francisco, Atlanta, Louis
ville, Kansas City, New Orleans,
or Washington, D. C. And still peo
ple wonder why timber owners
hasten to cut ripe timber and
hesitate to plant new forests.
HELP BRING VICTORY
BUY MORE WAR BONDS
—BOOKS—
(Continued From Page 2)
berries and grapes are not omit
ted. There are always two things
to bear in mind when planning a
garden. The inevitable bug will ap
pear, and perhaps disease, and
these have to be combatted. The
next important thing is the fact
that you may grow more than you
can immediately consume and
should therefore plan to store or
preserve in some manner the sur
plus. The author has given con
siderable space to the two things
mentioned above.
This is a book well worth read
ing and studying.
Only one-fifth of America’s
forest land is owned by the public
through the Federal, State, or lo
cal governments. The other four-
fifths is owned privately. Farmers
own one-third of all the Nation’s
forest land, mostly in the form of
small woodlots. Taxation reforms
are vital if this privately owned
forest land is to grow new timber
crops.
When Expert Needle Work
is Required to Make You
Neat and Military, Come to
A. & M. Alteration
Shop
STRIPES - INSIGNIA
PATCHES
FCmAiCTORY
BUY
UNITED
STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
8th Serv. Command
Employees to Receive
Sewage Instruction
Two groups of civilian employ
ees in engineering and sanitary
corps at 8th Service Command in
stallations will come to the Texas
A. & M. College for special instruc
tion in sewage treatment. First
group of 30 taking the two-weeks
course will report Feb. 19, and the
second group of 20 is scheduled to
arrive here March 5.
. These sewage treatment instruc
tional courses will run eight hours
per day, six days a week and will
be given by S. R. Wright, acting
head, and J. H. Sorrels, associate
professor, of the Department of
Municipal and Sanitary Engineer
ing, and P. J. Alvin Zeller, research
associate, Engineering Experiment
Station.
This sewage treatment instruc
tion is an ESMWT course under
the U. S. Office of Education with
the expense paid by the Federal
Government.
There are three perpetual planks
in a platform of forestry; perpetua
tion of the nation; perpetuation of
the woods; perpetuation of wealth.
The trio is inseparable.—C. A.
Schenck.
STUDENT CO-OP
Bicycle and Radio Repair
PHONE 4-4114
Solve
Your Rationing
Problem
Buy Edgerton Un
usual Values. Edgerton
shoes are styled right,
fashioned right and
designed for comfort.
Most Stves
$6.50 to $7.95
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“Two Convenient Stores”
College Station—Bryan
LOUPOT’S
A LITTLE PLACE - - -
; - A BIG SAVING*!
line of the eugenic problem and
the way to a real solution, by S.
J. Holmes.
Electron-Optics, by Paul Hat-
schek.
Sex and Life; forty years of bio
logical and medical experiments, by
Eugene Steinach.
Biological Time; discusses the
aspect of ourselves and our dura
tion, by P. Lecomte DuNouy.
Agriculture:
Tenants of the Almighty; the
story of Greene County, Georgia,
by Arthur Raper.
Three Years of the Agricultural
Adjustment Administration, by Ed
win G. Nourse, Joseph S. Davis,
John D. Black.
American Agriculture, 1899-1939;
a study of output, employment and
productivity, by Harold Berger and
Hans H. Landsberg.
History:
An Historical Geography of
England before 1800, edited by
H. C. Darby.
Napoleon and Talleyrand; the
SAT AGGIES...
The following great bargains now offered in Room 3, Administration
Building:
BATT SUBSCRIPTION $1.50
TOWN HALL (for remainder of season) $1.25
LONGHORN (better than ever) $5.00
ATHLETIC FEE (a must for every real Aggie) ..$1.65
(This fee can be paid in the Fiscal Office)
If you failed to get any of these MUSTS during registration
don’t wait any longer.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
Room 3, Administration Building
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