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HomeMy WebLinkAboutScrapbookt4 V- V'O, T-. W `4 AN i 0 Y v C f r ~;y aub.'.t h 1 r~ . : al a t ~ ~e A N dF~W Y ~ ~~9 ~ N "np NM`Y~{~. ,Vmm Awl oval ~ era Memorow h)p Boo DEDIOATED TO F,eepers of'ke~~sakes li As-, ";NH HERE'S WHERE WE MAY TURN AND 30' DOWN PATHS OF MEMORY BACK TO THE LAND WE USED TO KNOW-THE LAND OF USED-TO-BE $1 IRLISHc-D EXCLUSIVELY BY THE COLLEGE MEMORY BOOK COPYRIGHT 1918 WM. W. CLAY ^.W . PLATE 2LX~__ NAM E CHICAGO, LL ,~Arnrw!~t,/1rw~r.Argrgr d1►/1~ a✓•w %%Wawa V4 A%.AA N./4 V/*djr 3 r , N N i r .i I. ( I j r ~ ' ~~~1V'4~/~~•^r~1~~1~/ V~7r~~t,C~ 1I/. liI _ i~/. 9~~F_ V _ lt~r~t^~ ,&%owA y,ViVaV~Y•~•"~v&vAvA'%+AvAw•arAvraMW•vav f ► ► t 'r 1 r • t 7 • ► • • • l • ♦ I I Copyrigbt + ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ d 1 • 1 1 L ♦ l 1 ♦ . J 1 J l ♦ J ♦ l 1 1 1 • 4 / ♦ ♦ 1 ~mz X P r ~l TtyF~ ~ ry {{yyy,J u~ yr l~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I ..'Y,<' F~ F! !~y I C 1 I r w I ~Iw'T'. f 'TA n mil :i{ _ 114, ¢ r'y ' \ ► mr N~1 V ~ x ~ ~ ~ r ~IL,1►T~JJ1jI,w ~ ~ + ~ d 2~ii~ ~ - ~ r ~~k ► 1 1 I~ 'p.~,r Yd,'. 'S,.,k.~ t s~+,cY wrt~ .F~~'r.~ c ~`~=v~*~,.-.I r~ ► 1 I ~ 1 ..f ~ Vim: "V ~ .i-n..✓..•, ~ s - ( 1 7h IIr,f7 tl It pi ,il :t } I-. ? ~~,d I •{Y r1 +d(:f ~9 i~ /S.'',a - 1 Aa r I ;~,tu..:lif,t. 7~~;a•t,~. is ,7%. t! 3y,~ I~t'~'~1t I {:.!r ii' kP_. ,lf. 161 I._ s ,C I, ~r;:: IdIF Vr I,,~n"y. F}' ,Ilf Y, ''I' ✓ r~'; j?' I ~ 1 ,I , ,.~I 6T 'kl it t , l iI I R.I a t"q L wl l 1 it. lfi¢':,'RI~ •1-~,, ,I.! 1 ~ ti ~t; ~t;' l.tlI{ ~ f' c!, "f... tl{,",~ I~` ~!7 1 I I' Iz i 4 4 ~r cilr it f CI tE:` is 4.S: fit; .t ,Y i rl;":C7 t~~~ 'I~ •F'4 y ~ g 1. ri.D 7, 1t t S i.~ t X 1 6 ,17 t f; I .ti p~ it Y I } b I. tel: ! is .~y. 1. l t rt l c i~ 4a r'~' Ej A '~►s`g ii~ .5'. W1 x yyr n-.~'. I V. h- t 1 ry.~' t 1 I Sr . .'rl u: .r r '~"Ib:: nib' If~[';'I 3 E ? I r ~ i[ i~ i !v •}q j{ tf S~. t~ ~ ~~~F o I t: lyt„,~ ,i .11, Ia,I. r, 1{•! ~!{rf ~r>..~ ~I~~Y 1~, •~2i, I a {e: ;tiGa ~Z+t- i! ,I. ir.. i~~. ~t ~ R n'dG t.. +r 'I '>1 f,r ;Wf~ -ils 1 I i 'li ~ ~ 'Y I f~~i<t~ ~y:.! %AV 'f , , E I FF ~irI ;;}S ~,i~: ;,~i'i`S I I s , ~9t `I,,~ l ~s~' ' 4 ~I ~ a M(a h ~+~:r I tj' ~r i!i'{li 4 Vl ,'.J,': r' ` 1 s{ 4 t` 1 I I { 1 S i 5 f 1 I t 1 f { I!' i I 1 I I i{ 4. 1 ! N'I 1. ~lu~ I - t w~ r t, ,f• i slfr t ,4t si } I b tlSt; t.! ,I trl { Sfi s e v4 eC p I t ~n V., 'a Z' 4N. : (1 S i I } i ! I 'Y Y i-'P 'i~ ~I T - J ;gSd'"k1~, y( d''~%!~ bV {;iyi. 1 r~' I 1~ , ~~).I ~r e,a_a t I ► .1 I vmet gal : td e!; ant tire T w'- f~'11A ~adst,sof~ {I:I ,,;~c.II yy es , e {zn t o r a Jt .II :~7t 1 3 it If / I I v ~y , j (~i Ir(~ } + { ll S t' A '4T a thO616 6iiit JIJV ~ia~i' tr s a 1{j tArw 4r a+ f, ? f ► I ~ ~ t i .J.: "~~i r e} 11 ~t¢ ! ~ 4~~I{ ' I(%~T {fi,11 -1~Itil~ )fir. ~I> ~ L I ► 1 i `i w d Yt(,.. ~ . ~ ~ a w / rat ,rxr~ x ~ ",%t P ..~-•xi., f ;t q 6.1x_ I d ¢ J r ~ w } I T I I J W sr~ ,t Y . . .C 0a7 I%id/AVA FARMERS, FIGHT! Farmers, Fight! Farmers, Fight ! Fight-fight, fight, fight-fight! Tear 'em up! Smash 'em up! Fight-fight, fight, fight-fight! Farmers, Farmers, Fight! AGGIE WAR HYMN Book of Friends: May it include the wise, the witty and the shrewd, And such as own the double art that makes them friends of head and heart. May those who stand recorded here grow dearer with each added' year; Acquaintance into friendship ,row, and friendship ever brighter glow. Old friends are best, we lightly say-but, as they fall upon the way, Keep full the ranks with newer friends, till time the adjective amends. And if old friends still seem the best, the adage should be thus expressed: Friends are not best because they're old, but old, because the years that rolled- The years that try, and mar and mend, have proved them worth the title friend. S WEIR MPtCHELL Hullabaloo, Caneck! Caneck! Hullabaloo, Caneck! Caneck! Good-bye to Texas University, So long to the Orange and White. Good luck to the dear old Texas Aggies, They are the boys that show the real old fight. The eyes of Texas are upon you, That is the song they sing so well. So good-bye to Texas University, „a We are going to beat you all to Ch ig-ga-roo-gar-rem ! Chig-ga-roo-gar-rem ! Rough! Rough! Real Stuff! Texas A. & M ! :"}i` SPIRIT OF AGGIELAND I. Some may boast of their prowess bold, Of the school that they think so grand, But there is a spirit that can never be told, It's the spirit of Aggieland. r Chorus: We are the Aggies-the Aggies are we, True to each other as Aggies can be. We've got to FIGHT, boys, We've got to FIGHT! We've got to fight for Maroon and White. After they've boosted all the rest, They will all come and join the best. For we are the Aggies-the Aggies are we, We are from Texas A. M. C. II. Alma Mater-so far as I roam My whole heart shall be with you ere, I'll always be proud to call you my own For its Aggieland so fair. KYLE FIELD. K-y-I-e F-i-e-1-d ! Yea! Kyle Field ! Fight 'em-Aggies ! KI YI. Ki Yi ! Ki Ke ! Rip, zip, zaree! Texas, Texas, A. M. C. 11 Is FARMERS, FIGHT! Farmers, Fight! Farmers, Fight ! Fight-fight, fight, fight-fight! Tear 'em up! Smash 'em up! Fight-fight, fight, fight-fight! Farmers, Farmers, Fight! Book of Friends: May it include the wise, the witty and the shrewd, And such as own the double art that makes them friends of head and heart. May those who stand recorded here grow dearer with each added' year; Acquaintance into friendship ,row, and friendship ever brighter glow. Old friends are best, we lightly say-but, as they fall upon the way, Keep full the ranks with newer friends, till time the adjective amends. And if old friends still seem the best, the adage should be thus expressed: Friends are not best because they're old, but old, because the years that rolled- The years that try, and mar and mend, have proved them worth the title friend. S WEIR MITCHELL AGGIE WAR HYMN Hullabaloo, Caneck! Caneck! Hullabaloo, Caneck! Caneck! Good-bye to Texas University, So long to the Orange and White. Good luck to the dear old Texas Aggies, They are the boys that show the real old fight. The eyes of Texas are upon you, That is the song they sing so well. So good-bye to Texas University, We are going to beat you all to Ch ig-ga-roo-gar-rem ! Chig-ga-roo-gar-rem ! Rough! Rough! Real Stuff! Texas A. & M ! KYLE FIELD. K-y-1-e F-i-e-1-d ! Yea! Kyle Field ! Fight 'em-Aggies ! KI YI. Ki Yi ! Ki Ke ! Rip, zip, zaree ! Texas, Texas, A. M. C. SPIRIT OF AGGIELAND a* , ;k4,70, l A.~ Some ma boast of their rowess bold , y p Of the school that they think so grand, But there is a spirit that can never be told, k TAPS. It's the spirit of Aggieland. I A -and-M - Chorus: . . We are the Aggies-the Aggies are we, A,.-and-M.- True to each other as Aggies can be. , Farmers fight, Farmers fight, Farmers fight- We've got to FIGHT, boys, , We've got to FIGHT! A.-and-M.- We've got to fight for Maroon and White After they've boosted all the rest, Farmers fight They will all come and join the best. " A.-and-M.- For we are the Aggies-the A are we, We are from Texas A. M. C. We II. ily Alma Mater-so far as I roam My whole heart shall be with you ere, I'll always be proud to call you my own For its Aggieland so fair. t h r- 0- S Facu Were Ito live a thousand yeant never would fo , them TLXA~ A,GGI FS _ Al l' •ANIF III III a~ ~k Student Hall of Fame II E' K r FY +:k 5 ri Comparative ,athletic Record I B ~ m~ saM ~ o~ 0 1 oW A mm~ ~ 9 CJ y a aim w a~ I MHO QC r O .~q0 B ° P1 °o a A ~ ~ M i GDCd (D ` °W O m Om. ~mM O CS m M A a JQ O~` ,:tli O qm~ 9 ~ qy ro j r ro~ O M • ~ ab x G p ~co U y 0 ' t7 A 10 ~ma 0 ° O m ro 4 g 01''1.1 O A A °V E4 p°mm 9awm C am O ° 0 0 k z; o'u I H n + 192 .7. - 1.an__ + + 192 jF- L2Z9 Positlon Name and Class Remarks Date OPPONENT They l^- Position Name and Class Remarks Data OPPONENT They We f CJ _E BALi _ T - _ FOOTBALL SCORES FOOTBALL TEAM FOOTBALL SCOREF ~ . E pya~ l70J.6.S_ 5 rrnl y - I ~ 4 - 0 / r R. E. R.T. , 411 13 6Lr' e - 0 0. _ p _ _ ~~l7wP nerrrsZl Q ~I r T R. G. Fl F ~L.-.~ " 120 ~rkansA 1 40- R. G. G , ~ ewan e e D 6Y t3 Q C. c. - - L.G. L.T. Cl~too „ 1~ k~ /80 465. / 99 63 )4,m ,---Texas Tech '514.0. 6 . T, g-d n C u f - t as 1 21 akey ig ooV N3 Ate~n're IY1 U / L. E. SIL 3~ k s /7 S 46 ~ /'C e - - 0 1 ~ i / L. E. 1 L" k 5 a r0 . 7 _ _ - a 7 R , c e - ~ 19 ; R.H. 11` ` 11 /S .5 Ull,VC s 1 f i R,H, ' ~ ~ s-- r r ~ j c s F. B. ' e 40L 12 sn; c5~ Jrcr /60 &S. BASEBALL SCORES pro I F, B. l,e - e_rs-fir - -e5S F3ASEB ( 'ORES AL L., S ' L.H. _ J.i» i2 .null _170 Liba _ lC2 / Z L. H. R__00 rS e Q. - e E l2 Q. sub, ruin ire r l ? o lb R t 0 9 u! - -~y a_k co n_ov. /y-r 1DCf a /.6,s, A R /'C 12 J 'f w 4 "1 De le - r - ' aC Lc .L 1 d UASE3ALL TEAM SAID, BASEBALL TEAM fTCI rU16'5 C. '0 C A- e'-1 s./V, U s G C. Lam! s.. _ P. V m a n a a U re 2 o P. . ? T ~►l z 0 - s, s. o _ -re ra 5 U z . s. s - N S - - - - ist B. ~ 7 8 1St B. E ~5 2d B. ~JQ L f 'r• 2d B. Q~ 3d B. -~~12~1(1" .M.6, z- 3d B. QQ~ L~,U• _.D_ R. F. j _ro 1 /„S CA a $ . U, L/ R. F. C. F. L.F. Co na vere e. ~ U L.F. FLL 1 - - st h. 1e1/umA ?pro ~,1e~_ T~ Xa. s U sub. ,eo N - 1 -C -La - r BASKETBALL SCORES Nf7RR/S_ C///z DEP _ BAJI:ETBALL SCORE, BASKETBA L TEAM J F _ BASKET BALL TEAM 3 2-17 1 R. F. PE r R. F. 74 e `✓Fi ~J s DQ u - L. F.- 5 C' L) _ - L. F. c. ~QWAI 5 5 3 c. /0e 'UrQ R.G. SIKES CFLP - - R.G. eefa er" 5./~1.U 2y 151 L. G. { t Q 175 2 3 L.G. _ L J . 01 Sub, S'q JsJ sub. pe ~a ~La S 32 2 T _Lu 6-Na t_~{Gr / - rfi» e~lcz~ U, 1 ~ ? TRACK TEAM TRACK SCORES TRACK TEAM Laub(/- . TRACK SCORES Capt. I_ 1~ ~rPela y Te r;t s U, _f c t`~ _~%YELL 5yE 9 KFr' S Cl Q r ; 14 la - g PSS - k?42 1~1L~ S U. 0Z ~,C S ~ - r g ~D~ 13~r__/flett_-sue' ._I11.us_ ~~rmPr - ~!yQr_Qa.-~ Lrc - ( l4 S o f Co n ~r -e" C h'rc .53 1 ; - ' OOGE 4_ f3MPso f o D 5 ~2EtNG~1~ L- 8, L~~ . No41! PS - _~rt I ,~r ~P_e - rS boa ty&Ln- ~ a -3 -,M-!_C-f W EIL HQED7AF~ v 2- 11. DU_ _ Lo ` ALAL llaL._Z.~i~ f .5~ _ . y o - rJu~ I.7 C U ZS 2 Nti - l ~Er1 Dl~i 's ~w TEAM. 'S I ✓d5s- yn M Mtc-4 Q?L ,~V.- ~vilrw-o rF u.s _.'d/ate/ s --Qtd~1_CfC_>Y L y r~ , 45 ~?/"~rz~m>q ~r S U q ~,2 J yTa~, saS --I ~gl 9a n. -a 6-Re La _s - r I `!-e API it _ _ ow 17 Wi117 c~ s - a'I~e Z.) 7. W40 Et~_-i.~ ~Rd 5 CUNT /F p_I 6M T x .15' .z oil ° ~a ° I B a ym ad'' 0 9 al ~m h O 0 O 0 q a, D w~ m m 0 ap ° ism I~ s Imo id o m M N A QP' 0 m %4 " 0 m Ap B a° ed as ° od °a qM O b q ,H as m ah b ~ q° 01" mm I~ m oq °g mw ~m z"a w D N q ~ El 0 " qO A a a° a p i E+ ° yF Comparative Athletic Record + Position Name and Class Remarks OPPONENT They We i ' ' TEAM - FOOTBALL SCORES ~IULtDp ~ prNxE~' AL 170Q_ R. y 28 -SO VFH We]5 TERN - 13 10 R.G. CNRI5.TIAN '/_1~a~.cciES C• Joe -BROWN 13 L.G. -6ICHTFR L. T. sas 4 -al L. E TRACY FLO_Y-O_ 5 4- F. E ZARAF01VETZS BASEBALL SCORES L. F SPOOKS CQ/~O1( " a Q 7-ammiC "lYIl~1~_ 4PTAI a o Sul- VOWEL L_,V3 6)(-0 RSEY___ ~EL /,CA V.4NZ4Nn r-Moa,eE - ~~s TL x u s o P. . ~5~►~.~__Mi~ L~ U S. S_ 1st L. 2d L;. ~ld,CE1~~r .~Z - - - - - R. F• C. F.~ L~ - g L. F.._ U.l Y-_Y? 1 A Sub. .h.S,. o h BASKETBALL SCORE S BASKETBALL TEAM L. F. Nj , f✓~, U. L9 29 Ll{ -17 c ~XS t(oE_ ~'KN. A R. G. L.G. , f O IV ECIV K _Z"X~~_U ~~r Jr 4 5 U, _E7 e'l a~ I15 - _JV TE !M TRACK SCORES _Caw mm_a r~ _ _ _ _ t~11_♦ 5 Zhc~ c S10 f-a m _ !_a,5 tEr _~5 5.lyn s _ ~ ~ 3l - ~ Ya;-C 4__ laca.rb-- _ ~ LQ7r_ r_krdnsR_~_,_.IO S}~~ICr li I I ~ - i--_ - _ TEAM -cr_k Yas__ 4'z P1 + 30 - -1Q3I + Position Name and Class Remarks Date ONENT They We f FOOTBALL TEAM FC-IOTBALL SCORES r' R. E. ,c en -Molone t~Nies}gr+'t G - R. T. culderv-- cm )t_ one _ ~F.~1_CA5 k 0. R. G. ~'hr~S~IGrw{~1 ore 1 C. L. G. Abhy- Nolan o r _ ansas ~ L. T. L. E. R. H. F. B. gpri ~-40YVIA be fi I'll s s- s C. V-1.n. 1-L_- - 5 BASEBALL SCORES ri L.H. klol e =A5 ~n Q. St_ } j eIcr-Gvque5 Sub. ~~_~(ood,man N rl' BAS BALL TEAM C. P. S.S. 1st B. 2d B. 3d B. R. F. C. F. L. F. Sub. BASKETBALL SCORES R_ ASKETSALL TE AM kon5a 5 k7- q-37 _ L. F. J U~Inr C 6rg- 14 o 5. . e r I _ Kfil S J0 -,2Q Q P R.G. QYCUm 4 L. G. Sub. VC L man N 1tPaq _ RACK TEAM TRACK SCORES Capt. .w TEAM Write In mmneof neat)aaoei[esport SCORES 1 cis I c THE 1927 SEASON Texas Aggies 45, Trinity_____________ 0 Texas Aggies 31, Southwestern------- 0 Texas Aggies 18, Sewanee------------ 0 Texas Aggies 40, Arkansas----------- 6 Texas Aggies 00, T. C. U.-___________ 0 Texas Aggies 47, Texas Tech_________ 6 Texas Aggies 39, S. M. U------------- 13 Texas Aggies 14, Rice_______________ 0 Texas Aggies 28, Texas University----_ 7 TOTAL SCORES Texas Aggies 262. Opponents 32 i 41_;10H S FINAL CONFERENCE STANDING Team P. W. L. T. Pct. Texas A. & M. 5 4 0 1 .900 S. M. U. 5 4 1 0 .800 Arkansas 4 3 1 0 .750 Texas University 5 2 2 1 .500 T. C. U---------- 5 1 2 2 .400 Rice 4 1 3 0 .250 Baylor 5 0 5 0 .000 1 ~ 1!' i;! 4; s. yf 5 a TOP ROW-Left to Right: Coach Bible, Deffebach, Mosher, Brown, Lister, Sprott, Holleron, Figari, Conover, Coach Bassett. MIDDLE ROW-Left to Right: Wylie, Bartlett, Varnell, Alsabrook, Capt. Hunt, Sikes, Petty, Davis, Richter, v BOTTOM ROW-Left to Right: Mortellra, Rektorik, Mills, Dorsey, Ish, Snead, Burgess, Holmes, Cody, Ewell. i . xu" Jii~'r~" T'1~t . .s r ~S i~ aye r1 n ~f" r ~c r :t,• ~~v S PAS ut„~. ~w .a ,.,~~:~5,.~:.-T~ ~..~`~~.~.r. 3Sr(a'r~l~ a~ a!: ~t;~~~s~'.,3A~7 I'!Ct:'D~,.~ ✓"~~~.4~~, ~'W`L~l'~~~Se~f~u..~~~'',~tTk'~;~ 1 a ,t iI~RRr^^^~----~^ Jul RRRRI'?RRRr IV ~ Acadew-c Svi idirn5 Y I ~is+i Q. d own Swam Friday I~ urld,~9 r4l 9exas p ggie; ~I -.121 nr nnnr~r~f717r^- IIase ha l! w+ond * '~a1~'"nfhd Rf2f2JR-rJ-l 2f n n n f7 f7 2~ Kyle F le- Id 0004f el 0"*~ ioo~ r i Gy m v% k L Star 9azlV'9 T a+, - t Build~n~ bramf rp pm RR.R Main Drag a r A a tt LL'7 F y ti l I vdk,t a Pity ! aid so youwq to To............ I'd like to be the sort of Friend that you have been to me, I'd like to be the help that you've been always glad to be. I'd like to mean as much to you each minute of the day As you have meant--Old friend of mine-to me along the way. I'd like to do the big things, and the splendid things for you, To brush the gray from out your skies and leave them only blue. I'd like to say the kind things that I so oft have heard, And feel that I could rouse your soul the way that mine you've stirred. I'd like to give you back the joy that you have given me, Yet that were wishing you a need I hope will never be. I'd like to make you feel as rich as I -who travel on, Undaunted in the darkest hours with you to lean upon, I'm wishing at this very time that 1 could but repay A portion of the gladness that you've strewn along the way. And could I have but one wish this year, this only would it be: "I'd like to be the sort of friend that you have been to me." SALLY y t Sally ryas a hot one, Sally was a ~t Oh Boy, I loved my Sally, and how, We'd kiss, we'd hug, we'd pet, Cause Sally loved me, you bet. Sally's eyes were brown, those o~ liquid pools That make strong men weak and wise men fools. They'd talk and 00000ooweeee what they said, The kind of tales you've never read Sally loved me, may love me yet Where have you ever heard this be- fore? 0 my dear please don't try that any more! 0 my dear please don't try that any! 0 my dear please don't try that! 0 my dear please don't try! 0 my dear please don't! 0 my dear please! 0 my dear! 0 my! ON But do I love Sally? Naw call wet It's Susie now, Sally ain't no more I know the guy she went with before. Who is he? Who else could it be? It's that law lived bum that rooms with me. Gr¢%OOANC ` 0. i43iret n .Zal vi i&m-*sf%-4IN r) CARE R'1I I/-MGM CIRCULA R 110TION V a l X~ o° a dashing officer of noble birth a Back to the Middle Ages. Two knights meet on the outskirts of the battleground: "I prithee, Xavier, couldst tell me where I can learn to write short- hand?" "Certainly, Percival, but why crav- est thou t6 :lean?" "Necessity, dear comrade; I lost four fingers in yon battle." a~~ n THE CHAMPION OF THE WORLD! 0 e~ ~ 0 5 ,a y X11 ~~l $ Sfe wars RC. panels NJ. &o we l/ WIZARD -Roo,- to Nfek -v PALACE e That's her sixth dance with him to- t /ga`y °ti 4;,,, night. They must be engaged. That's no sign. oti a 5`$ Rut you don't know how she dances. crel: poi ~ ~rbaao4 ~o°~ . r Sep ~r ~eo4 . sti u4v',$,• c~o55, o tae oaa t~°ye S tew "Girls, you know we are Charley: r such sheiks that we just can't make our hands behave." Mary: "Don't worry. We'll tell k ° .;x r you where to get off." The LOVE L l tc vv a the rsin Piy What isyoo ore er • ~ Teach si~~~r'~nK • e topail• r ln$ °n o c' Di~IV ~ I,upll•. A gripping college romance of .%rxe LEGION OF THE CONDENNED ?hey courted Danger -He could fight- AND HC what ~ "If wishes came true, She: would You wish for?" He: "I would wish-ah, if I dared to tell you", o on What do you She: Go on, g wishing far?" think I brought up -them laughed at Death • WALKING BACK Of lux," f w ~ V r x Cam." hx Ur~„ long on a little less Sind th¢ " o ,ding roe, se voa ct t vro+k eve' cxt { io" tat; o - ! „Po irl • Lis het r~o, ,avc "A car?" stor "Ofco nrcd an angry father. You wc) urse b you can't hate a car; WhY, you foundd e absohitelY helpless Yourself with if a flat tire." dau~h no, I n'ouldn't, Daddy" te non Yhter h retorted confidentially. I've R ({at tire., the air before this. KIeshmq--MIms- S ~,~M t ~ y Y t . 9 ~ ~p~'~lyo co • " t`¢ i\\\ N, Vin. l h a ¢ ~f ' a v CN& V'1 ,N tVA~ l ~ b SIN S4~yr, 0~ ~ V e t'' '``'err I,^ti' , , sentence,I find", this e, his dad, correct boy --NS I,m out -eouoY„ •.c: "Empty vessels make the greatest sound." Maybe that is the reason most of us are so noisy. a.~ ~ sy . aC •o w 0 K Z h ~C . e K r t i r 9 r-77777 i I I llt- lt,ed ' sbe °uth t~a to a X" <,IrVV d X14 ~~r a he 101" Stun te a st at t OcleaL e rea e li2 inf t51, <<}iy quliy desee t1y asb Gtiarm ,ee.be t Vtolen `Vas his• nd wlspele`1, a dawove ea S~„ ed, 0, t c thi~ ° t°ob l1 ` ste°d t took heYmptnlur you tl~,Sweetheao his avm s ie impressl0nug~t'ng her to tq°k gp0d 0ffi sn nli on,t tet'be, breathed, I h ^4' w w~ 0 ro.w ro w 'a, yYo Try V ,C ti J ro^ ~ v fir, • .f r s it was very hard Crollie Ollie says o lete his ride for Paul Rever assedlot of f houses because he p down where they'd forgotten to P their shades, ' ' 'o w~ ~ C ro ro a G w Qro U C a ~o S _j w x, @ U ro w w b ~ C 5 oYw 0 4C~ C w h tp G w She reminds 4 miles the morn, v epUmmanat 3p in CS r nlc, uppers. s„ few inP``t;° v so . and very to"TS . f~ F'~sh Doi jq28 A y -~x ~vm rx_o x" 0 °ox x " d pox oM. x v c. r A r fi z p ~ ~ C C ti U C fi a ,C •h fi fi• y v ~ !s~zrk little Youw~nt tg~tric o ~ughterq K°w ab think ~r + e ab PuYSe don ,,~o. 1 et to caf h Mother ise fot het would be wlain sightK in P l1zoneY l ~o pla+n one k . - tei1 what vows fu! yon wh10Ve and no Baia en he ~s; b ohe d3 oonfr~ E5~~ l el O * * * t fri~,h~ nl 1 .1 r d l If the modern miss woulose one Of st . PokQ1. she would look hand o daughter of Eve. like a true R MILITARY TRAINING I s °nU Lan- Paint the1 old cuTlOS'ty of Girls who of the a fee, wet paint. adVantaBan otaco to hum , the BLOOD WILL TELL ~e• G 0 I~ithPre s . o ~0h T the °e~s the ae~ o t0 be 30 420 road fait the tt,"Oe vntj 0,71 we \ get .U vv ro~ I ~ .C y ro . c3 roti. ~r IVA " t yo VS, "My husband is a lingerie sales- man." "How do you keep him interested?" C r 7 za~S K Hey, officer, this is the cook's day off, come in and find the can opener for me ~ - -a s ~r l~ Nahas Raench Sowell- Daniels -Allen ~.ry Clnthe., ~yt~•. and sh tns lel~~he a jctii ser ento shohe tvo_ w c' Mary bad a lliiie mb.elljaslis ex- w holy the lamb are doing as petted. vY mama, "For doesS duel, pantsPapa wear "He's studying to be a quack doe tor. Now run off to bed." . . ALMO.T HUMAN c3 L O Z n y „ C f C J: ^ V ~ EGr ^04 5 E, X l ✓ 'f. _ u v o ❑ x ~ za w CV S Be that as it may, Ethel, don't for- get that a bird in the hand denotes bad table manners. G ~o y r r+ N c c J. v ti N O o C ,AL Fy 4 Ey "MY stock makes a quick turn- over." "What do you sell, Buddy?" "Propellers." 1 J a w~C1 v A~ur oo~~ F F I x~~l O,bA`'~.c UF'73a m u 'm" x u r m ~ v ~ r F ^x Q . J n C 7` O y b c LLU Mary had a little dress, it was light and airy, It never showed a speck of dust, But- it showed just lots of Mary. 15 A~ ~D aQ4~ e ,s \9 COLLEGE CALENDAR S Xt } C~ :J Cy' H P• & o r VOMOu5 'Ball Ylayers price 1 C' µoQk~ns Ht It must be told for you here. Don't you want to put somethirn~ ~P ltoille, 1 nd buy Yo ~a ~lJ,~ im feel at around you? t p y, ft~ V 0~ ",4wright, t'un ou She: Don't you? Of oats. - z - 1 • ;elj it bag :g - v J vwVddoft r- qr- N ti q, y o ,.w 0 THE OPTIMIST They found a little courage That simmered in the sun, They blended it with patience And just a spice of fun; They poured in hope and laughter Then with a sudden twist, They stirred it all together And made an optimist. A+ thz R; k ~e Ka A little maid STRONGromIK Siam, ° t at BTidg eP p°Y's figs Once said to her lover, Kiam: A ' f°lks, ba le guest "t You may kiss me, of course, "wolles °n? eYeingfema s stti4pe(L But you'll have to use force, 1 °lotr Guest „YeS, sh' )AVxe But thank heaven, you're tiling dr fol "tion.' Stronger than I am. e r and reads 1 ~,d~leb 84: That ' sW-e Pla nn y Pik-ht. Oh, In(" stop and "0: tlast tiul,~~~ all the Miracle play, eh? r K6Gnsck "DO } ou serve fjr11 Pei ~,1 "Walk in and we'll sco %%h.it we can do for you." V J N 3 ~ v ~ w ~ c0 .L ~ H N 7+ N T ~ V F w U ~ ~ fi Drag t shiek): (,I,dloCal dry-goocw Please.,' like a pair of counter garters, the lone, YeS' 1Tss; something like Y°u have on?,, that pl'etri of Ii~~t ti~~ar~wthere, but at doW yes, neW rat ~`,1.°W~: S°°°nd $1 t chinking:' it?„ ~Oh, l was F'rst~ r.S MEDITATIONS Has it ever entered your mind that ther are 2,500 Aggies, each having two arms with an average length of 21/2 feet to an arm, making a grand total of 13,500 feet of arms, or nearly" 3 miles? Yes, that arm would be long enough to wrap around any girl twice and slap her papa down if he tried to use the old trusty shotgun. And even if he did shoot, he'd have to have a cannon to be in range. Some arm. -0 And from statistics, each and every Aggie can hold a kiss at least one minute. Multiply by 2500 and you have 2500 minutes, or 41 hours and " 40 minutes, or one day, 17 hours and 40 minutes. Quite a caress, With all this paraphernalia, the Texas Aggies could stage quite a magnificent petting party. And you know that the Aggies are aggress- ive, progressive, and persistent, too. Oh, well! What's the use anyway,ll because it won't be long now. J. C. S. (Shakespeare.) Furor 1!A-115M-10-1-16 OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT A OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT A. & M. COLLEGE OF TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE OF TEXAS Cadet 'r V Student J....... , ....F...r..:.......... . af/_. -soT 17 . Clas;. ~,3... . cadet The following report has been charged against you:....... . Has permission to be absent from his company and the col- . loge campus From 7 !9 5 11 . -2 and you have been assessed........... ............_......-.Demerits. To 1. i9 !2 7. No Explanation Will Be Considered After 48 Hours from Date of This Card For the purpose of You will keep this card for your information and guidance. CHAS. J. NELSON, Comnlandert. Approved: 17831.-36M-8.27-A. & M. Press S. M. U. VS. TEXAS A. & M. 0 CRUEL 1VORLD! The woman's slender body swayed back and forth as she gazed out upon the cold black night. She knew that in a moment the man would force her to leave her warm shelter and wander about in the cold of the sleet and snow. Could her frail body withstand the impacts of the relentless December winds? She was terrified at the thought. Then the woman felt a cold blast of air and saw the man enter the room. He advanced toward her and placed a rough hand upon her shoulder. She gazed piteously into the stern face of the man who stood towering above her, "Lea,e at once:" his deep harsh voice resounded; "this street car has reached the end of the line." GENERAL ORDERS (Official) 1. Cadet M. H. Stewart, Tr. D, Cav.. is hereby transferred to Com- pany B, Signal Corps. Cadet Stewart will turn in at once to the College Supply Sergeant all articles of government property now in his possession and draw oth- er equipment from that allotted his new organization. By order of lieutenant Colonel T. F. Adjt. TEXAS RIAL STADIUM EAST SIDE U ATHLET C COUNCIL 5 0 THANKSGIVING DAY C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1928 TEXAS vs. A. & M. Row Price $3.00 The management mumes no responsibility Seat for accident or loss to any spectator. >DIUM• AS TEXAS ON Cash refund will not be -room- made o I this ti `w F 5 11 A III U, :O'] ~'"tea C- . -ll r qT g 2 4T SPECIAL. TICKET Dallas Ry. & Terminal Co. Good for Ride with Transfer November 10, 1928 i Stewart has returned 1Vlortimer the 1929-30 a A. & yI, College for a rec term.'lortimer made sa- ord last term and was n geantIn n%ny h}~ OWNBY A~MI i_Kick siTURDAY 41 ' NDV. 10 1928 , , , t i t MortimeL' Stewart of A. was here for the `C ~1 ~I '~eelr end visit,. 111K his mother, 18tewart.'~ Mrs, Suvie (The. hts ..tf,e) J ' 9 behind vie K`r` i;igilt annd me VA CAT I ()N . uok fon t0 pay • c the ev ey x_11 R Good• ther ^n Geeing some tirc ate - ea u. tir a ^ . Sri, 4~° ~1e ~ee4~°te~°ti~,~e tt`a '~fi~ ~g~eS tea YrOfsstratin~ f 0ete sf otu denn >n haraeteriStjC al, A feu is inbaYita t e born to at, the law °f aYChid wel`Dinah+ and ° If arced would be w1°t wo~an u ,dose, It E don uegro n named ea, 40S negro ma If D b d°es . Vtli Olt trieity Elee ctri iuake Memory. Soph: "Gosh, Fish, you are dumb." Fish: "Yes, Sir, I've been knowing that a long time, I was terribly as- tonished, when I was born, to find that I couldn't even talk for about eighteen months." ~xa Y~tun,--) gum ,per Pop ~ T 4k0btarhlA gaY,k Nei 0slea-5Jjt,. ~,rLa to 71 w 1~1o{h4r F Loou151E 1 Ln~t('n0.l1UriRI I'~GOES ~ ~)G51t1°h THE PULLMAN COMFANY R!!!" 1 NO SURCHARGE 1. PASSENCER`S CHECK. The licketOf which this check is a porL oN Idences vavment of the clmrge made by he 11ulli n n Cmiiponv for the i accommodations descrllcvd and is issued without eolleetion of N any IRailruad Sareltarge ac- ~'Z count passenger holding railroad r pass described on ticket. t0 a STON, Tex. ^ W~lr~i ETA To 4Z !A n.. .08 M Line No------------- Via------------ R,R. Cl r taken into car will beI N entirely at owner's risk L - THE PULLMAN COMPANY PASSENGER SCHECK GFNOSURCHARGE TICKET To b, ret:~i ud by PunienP.e7 to 6lrniirc uo- ~I.T~ ~ammodn Cb.a Intll~', no aermn onnyln a [lekrt. Pr.,~r[y l+i -u '.tits ca, n1 'l be co. drel9 tit ,.rnr'e rl*k. NEW OR! EpK.!~o HOUSTON, TEX. N Lu er :10 v Line No MaTov DuME57AWE rGlF ,vlr5liss1pfj ~l✓er frd~r, eke ffi6urn~R Bank Alewllr/eans Za. /92p Cp 0ra 0 ~ umlm~;r 1 d T~ /-~r~al ~rd,IT oer'Pass 1 ynrNH Frlqo r: aene5sec~'~~s• IVI ( I fH, r5 _ ~ln W+ Id Ca f loin l - ~UGR OUT dun i'~ 00Ide~ in ((/51`Anee SK ~~r 1 ~o e~. our sP'ue, in tibusn4 s a t~ with' oat, tbele beats u~ t11V ve ~~reu`fout beales u4 ~u lump', teao y°u 1o Vc~ tre And biug VV- a to o~et trey° °u S V"), Cgs tt goes to din' Qut, AV,d a°ut bea yes °ut have sp en " soul of ally°u e eud• Aud you be paid f t,lAe'n tr ou v~i11 vuiit vi~t°ry F °1 BACK TO COLLEGE SF-PT, 1828 WHAT A WOKDERLUL- EEf:LING An Eleventh Commandment Don't Get Caught Say what u yo be in the em6 think and o to think what arrassing positio u'11 never you say, n of having TO AGGIELAND. Let's have a toast, my comrades, We've toiled the long year through. Think of the things we've seen an done And the things we'd like to do. We've been through battles, ole Ar my, We've fought a clean hard fight, Let's split a bottle between us And fight them over tonight. Think of the times, old army, We've grabbed our ankles and grin- ned And-come up smiling after it all With a bloodshot battered end. Think of the times, ole comrades, You've wakened to reveille, Those hated notes of a bugle That meant another day. Think of the times, ole army, That you have stood retreat, And then the dying notes of taps Lulled you off to sleep. You've heard those same taps, army Through silvery bugles blown, And your heart went out to a com- rade, Who at last had been called home. There are tears in your eyes, old army, But tears you do not regret. Those are not baby or womanly tears That make your cheeks so wet. It's a pouring out of your soul, ar- my, For a school you love so well And you'd fight for it to the end, army, Though it meant everlasting hell. So then have a toast, ole army, For "the school we think so grand" It's bred in us, it can never die- ''hr Spirit of Aggieland. - Fitzhntrirh. SOPHOMORE YEAR ~2V_7 r ~e VI kes ~a Mac" 7G1 i Ion . -I%- t 1 a Sp r ~ 4 V y~~a ;zl ~c l F ~ m C J ~ ( v 0 r r Izjs- AJle i;il 1 i r ~I 4 ku x~ Ile r NO c e ~ o ~ r ~cb y IN u y~x Q ` jT r 11 lir )'r l -Alt S~¢¢ YOUNa Aui-Hm- / came to this party to yet some material. Svvi--i•:•r 'I mm; Well, what you've got your hand on nou) is sheer silk. 2 ,X / 4' ♦ 0 5f~ h a, `\1 ~ J nb~ J R.ll.`s Ccle~Ora~e Co• B v IGNA! CORP.- 4gZg '2a L, Gr. "A PHAwi - CAP rA1 R.F. CLANTOtA - tsS S~R~EuNY ( - - _ 71 49 _l `I{ A 1 k~-j Ji L Olp - AGGIELAN Hums of At co 1.C.J.NeISOr-+ 6.0v y car ur o~ , -err - ' • „ : ~ „ a ~ ~~r tia~ _h f ` ,.kr a 41 Ll~al Corps Ca~~ors 4- Guv Co na) corfs ur the vorld. thing left is Your , yolt OueaaN ANNIE- I haven't a mute have Wait Taal.oto gtironT~n- a m ou? next to nothiny. dress, hauen'l g Well, that's IE- 01,1114.1's AN-got g . 5't~na f lC'`orp5 1 ~zg-'z9~ I ~IPU4enan~ A.C. 1~11'ckelson st9>7Q~cor~s ca d e- Pa-fta n -j S-faff e y 0 ~ v ^C . 100 V ' W ~ D 4 Y ~ y w ~ U O r CQ C r - a, 37. THE JIAIDEIN',S PLAINT If you like 'em Kou kiss 'em. If you kiss 'em .you love 'em. If you love 'em You let 'em. If you let 'em You lose 'em. Damn 'em! F6>V, SW, Lcfcr_ Ck+ S+a~10r UoOrY Gts Atao e: ro r / Sao. Aa Up ; cog ' E2rly to be a, 0h fo1eth6 dot e y!B 7 lh the Ear1Y t poi1 the fun ' e to Sotbao"110 Of uad lot of guys' L4b'o11j1elater` l • ~ .a n n ni 1~1i 6. 76 e PuIk-ar a ll a - Cl y,ftA,c A. ~y (Yq. e Boy Fn1FNn---:-46y, didn't Viola pull of some clever things last night?- MARIAN-I'll say,' Wasn't that the !rickiest brassiere you ever saw? r n =i ' •~i i~ i ~i•i =i ~ 1 4 Ditches ItChE the SAedsvoto the Ielht of hid doh. he laent, IcSiOf han ' All around hi 1 rn. ,e with a ditch 4 ~LQ Ja1 eE1P ..a ~tre n PC~'kor T Y- i ti 5w1t0„nq Dw 11 "Are you musical?" "No!" "Well, quit fiddling around n knee." I 1\1, Dr.: n What you need is a little S. Y. T.: "Oh Doctor!" .,3 g a, ~r ~ U 4 N m N m CL ~N ON ~ O ~`nG ~ G T ce 'd 7 1 cz An 13Uh ,t e~ ~0r3e in~~t so ~p Lke Idol°~ 1 green Roll I look Un I hir LLC rte.. IT I aimktl~ r t • .a~ i hoc 'Z{0,4 YN x y ^v p v ~ ti ti ^4 k u CV ~~.4vo fi v 3fi i, a Y4 ~~r 1 1C, I Popular Fiction "Let Bygones Be," by Gones. "Yes," by George " Rocka," by Baby. V V aid ~~'~'l inh~i Pot m across dollar the gco' silver ~ teachinb river • xo was swi to m n 46 k r^ ►y ~,S 0 3 Q'te1~~ty O''e~ ot. a° tre •rti' 0~}~ wed , a 6~ ire raw' ~,°o n ~°tte o aer~ of ~ 2A~ n~ G 1 . ,in - L J rr L - -,r D 0 C~CY'r)\0Y r ~ L LX ~avV, 'A , 46 IN E. R f ~11 pmt be r 0 ~ °ogrt 1 M CO, B ~)JGNAL CoRP5- C,G. PRIC F- - CAPTAIN dot -'30 M,i4, STEWART- 15T SC-R,,-C-ANT `J,~' J all i E s r 4 ~ r ~ N ~j' ~ rr r7~ r f ~ ~ f ,s + a ,r + ay--~- 3 11 o P p1~~ S~aT ~ 6 , t ,~~~P~,c co¢Q5 q' V~1 ooa 3,`Xn - 1 r, re ra ra ra rar^^ Tha„ksgpv,r9 ►qz~ Mother-Minnie -Ellen 1 ' i ro ,77 71 Ma~v~ Ciu~ld7ny 0 1 3e{ore tl~e San ~~re 1~2q r V Air. • ~ ~.•y..n. sit.. ~.w.u i7y.ylYF w_' Uie.ur s - `FVAAN Ks aIVIN G CxAI'IE la 29 AC- GtEs - 13 7-&YAS U. - p - s., . 0 0, hP~ ice, ~~Pj~aj o.Pd r l) . 4 loo _ ••.v. ~Iho Sp ~ ~~P hd.c ~ ~aGP 3 . ~ ~P 11J T orb a10 `to~• Pp ~d Sjry ~ Wit: ' •i. u...+ S IFud ~3 ~Ial~~wo 'rke. ~oorr ma}e :3kxna 1, r°9 0c4l-er known as Mess Na(t) Nt►mS' ~u»i'pr tab. Load-back "t"est Mll I • u All lI I liii : ~I a . 0 M 14 I to S 1- n Cr . w~~ JZ2.2.R_21LZf2J22 A .B u 99 a Irg 1-16rary under Con%trucil;,l b9 aq ark' 14 1.1t in -t~¢ Ma kin Q> "ok\jwoo d `I MMM 13 R5%AGER woo A 1 e t 1, 6L I e~a~~an BasIVNC~Rv- S "HI '"vYi~~cn F f-1 I - 6J OL n ~ s KYI,E rr~rrt-o STSPIU M I~ I1 - - ~ r~ ra rr rJ2J'"'~2lZ All q,q.Kuel~n a Amlk l2l'r ra ra Lrs Virg s~ 1 ~I~ 1 iai . i NahaS Ailev, • 5 Su2f-2l?J~i..f2J21-ZZZZr~fZ2T' c:'r'.1 In ihe9s EIGII l' I ri ■ J 111 1~1 111 MI t ~ C\, wo p-p- `fF.Y St P R Rt t To the victor belong the Boils. 4N Melba r7 r~gij, ~~*~cain ~"lihn~e -.9 'r lt!ad~ Mkndd Lou _ Mocker WANDA 4ov - LAniu2 IN J . -.t 4ryLyrm Temple '2? P1 6T hCr - l,O IA%I - jv, I& uy cjY.j 19.3 a A1tee ~n~~Qa [~u5~t~=CEO -~v T]f?I~ f~l~f]I? fT l~r'^^^^^~~-- - J m Z8 19 1 j i I Hl I F +y ,qy, (~1+ Y1ry'~b t~t~.,it r ,,mom ~w ~m .m ~ 111 1 ~ Co. Corps 2$-29 ra ra r~ra ra rs ra ra r~r,~ra ra r~ra rar^•-.------ , 1 1]~11 r1311/~ f _ ~IIINI ~IIII ~ I I ~ I ~ ~ \11 \~II VIII INI 6 'a .U' CO. i lift AS IT SNOWED - AND WE LEFT FOR CHRts-rnAS tIOI~IDAYS Dec. Iq-l°I rR7- Nome- 1 - Thely" recc,.jes its decors}~on~ a-r %,,Ih,{e 7tie gar,q se4zrA be a w Snow ayld Snowing Atouse f°r the fire, plul• T{'s me. Md~n ~r~ve I if r u More Snow-einJ wAa4 Ibeeps us WOIrM Ivn Holly yieo0, C, E. Simpson +~ie, lool {CO r+, ~~Grl~+~gRn "Watch me shake that thing," said the elephant, coming to a suspension bridge. -f'. P. I. Skibbrr Cr y be 444 r,' Li~LL 1'v" an E4klrv,c -too Fvrr. 1 711 71~ 4900 Anna $y rd rt C I I'ne ar ~n 1•IouS~uv~, '~'ov Dec. igaa Fieoo L,--vY book Close and yoalll see hundreds o4 ducks on -.ke to ke. - dear Browns vIlle C(lris{ mC4 Iaaq - No Show here lCiAl Thomson ~,iq Vcria TQ -A• :D cc d9 a~ Nous+o~_ ZO1 Wcs'I- &ray Dec. IQd9 "Un uen,z o - uower lZ~a GrQncle 1(alle~ `Dee. 199.q warm and -Brq*91 + Dee. tgaq Pr ML TeXas P,p~ h,~e Co, an C~Gnn21 April 11~ 1930 ~r I F~sL,• Noll, I,,, - Gerdes Dec. tc+ a" 1~ , . Aj 1VeeN plater P Ian 1 1 Mason - S loco m b ~L'ep WQte,^ P 'I' t Elec4r,ca I En9,neertn9 ~un,ors InsPeet,uvn -)rip `-0 Nvus+Ovl Apv, I il, 1430 r~ = ow 1t~ uone ,n zhe ~O ti~Vwood wood vQrQA r ~ M aY`- Some o~ the 9Q"9 0.+ +11e Apr,I III 1930 The 519n on -E he Ware I4o, expla,,,s "0CA SA ovi S1,i p Kyle field gentlemen," aid the. "Ladies and in my address I hav somehino that I want to say to _Texa, Ringer. y0 u• 1,•ntST GOB-1'ne had a clear field with Grace lateltt• SECOND GoH--11'ell, yiuc me a nine warm pmdor this time of year. L it A r S "a Doss, ro M %10% r r' ,wpb- RuEti sn^i+k 1)0 LA EXPa~ure ? Jo~CC Sm~fl, y Alber The C°amFN5 Turns Coed For the Elea-t rica ~ Engineers 713all March- 1930. `The most Po Pinar Ma T\-\e Av M. co", Fur, aegkOLLs~ L.u. } h S rn l + k Ck 90 y ~r r 1 e h 'r I?.C.-D, ~c s 30 ,r~r~rar i~llre i r Irsi SQrgean~ d IVI otrC,k 1a3b WI' II,,e m ofhe'r I Tr. f- M o{nee" catsso, "i II -ReGd1- FirE ~2.ZiZ~Z~Z22P ~Z~Z222221-~ ra ra ra ra r~ ra ra ro ra r~ ra ra r h s~k ~~ti~5 A 4 t e a k Pts4-ol 'Practl c e Sks M¢ R,O.T, C. SUMtv1EQ CQMP JUNE-Jul.v I~0 Came S}anleq,Teyas 9 ~~r~n~ 0.} Sobbing Ta In5f j 12acltc El ?~AIT'1 X - _ O N Tke lo"I rests on the Rodio ~-ruc,k 0~ ~hG znd1rJ~~Y+a~ ~co ,,Panj - ro,, rUrT SPw.. C~0'AS~4h. ARTILLFEY ti- f. L r i , GULkj-U (,o,ri UUKA.~rvrAnv m~ i i +1 ow BUyga- spkrd - 4D 0C z l r z i i 7aNK5 v S!(r CO GPs ~JAin -the (xa-" 9 Ptl5 Q- s, _ a, , . { 4,t~~:~ Qo,= (Juv Oh _i 3 ~ GA)1:: _ Co, ti xrW a CC i r ~ n. f7R17 ra r"^ rP h . Vii,. d ' ,;J H i ~'evnU'ins 6~ hlina~urC FrCnc~ I~il~a,~ c_ -7renc.he s Doc Jj. M o hens Svc Y91sioI- ,?racl'%sc L-t , tJ E G 1 CPJ~ F ADL)~1T~N c-r EKERC15E S AT KELLY Ft EL Q Jun IE 1°130 SAN AUTOM, 0 - tr- X M08+~~ X Y, klc,, 10 1 ---.---(az - 103 ;i4 «a r~).cr~`.. aaY~'~ i 2.RJZRJZR-f~ f~I2J~~R~2f2J'2RRJ2I2R2fzrcTc.f2P2 R1 N1'ne Planes - N1'ne PQr0.Cj,ute., 7> Sq cr p G,paN Cq VAl kY ,VN ~ V 1a. V fir i F t (AYi-BQSii,IRI'- Srn1jC1,-Daniels 44 ARAINrxtS (.uY6'r hG I `.N$ °.t S FL, 4 J&POnese, Sunken` Gardpr~ Su„ Antonio ~ o a a Mr., Snnie Stewart of Ray City, who i~ visiting in the ritc. cntPr- ~talnPd with n picnic Wednesday afternoon st camp Stanley, hnnor- ing her son, M. H. Stewart, who is l attending the R. 0. T. C. enntp. Additlonal guests were Alesdames' F3enr1~ Rugcley of Rar Citc, bla.g- gie. Turner, Alice Harding, Irene Richardson, Alaud Lehman, Pat- tie Rugeley-, K. J. Taylor, Alisses' 1;2vPrnP Cohb, Tatchia McKee, Margaret White of Houston, and Alice Lee ]larding, and C. S. Raa- enger, R. C. Daniels, J. R. Smith, Chalmers Harding and Robert Harding. i 4 4 0 .IupaPi ese Svv,ken Garber, I AntAIle r woajer Melly) 5 n I IN I 7"a~eh;a M~Kee 4 Ru9yG 4 P Alice LQe 444 rArry i C~1a~merS ~grd~n~ We Go ~ ur And F-,d 7h k- M Rattle Snakes a,14 Chi* 9ers FI r I Some wkere, ,n +he racks Oil avid bushes Nord, Wes-f Of lloj San An~on;o, y:IIY r YM FR ACTIS F MOrne!nvers i Lcak~n~ doWr the z3I - _ - A 1-3 sr ~ ~ I 0 p f i N N x Mess IS the Correr-I naYn2. G c} ' - ~ 1 ~F S • r , ,,e$1- AIIen-Oan~eli-Sowell GSin~er ~Ur It . ~ 10. F 0A `p o v ~ ff ~ ~ 60 r 11I(~.~ _ r., l~r rM ~ ~ 1 L' t\ R u :l. ~Y~, t / , i.. ~ elf 6 Batik'n IS 0 WY} O•Sf W 14'~x +V)OS e Rest - Q3. , fautp CiraI4"itM4b,g tfrtI"firatr .~ZAesrrur Offirrrs Zrain'thtg (Corps ~~~n 0.r Tnar Smlie - aGCck -t-., ~Gvi1) Q~ L.OS~. ~~c~ryc~e~ (lPel{~ us~~nar d~~ J ~ /wj Surressfixiiij rompiete CO(I ~e EeY9ea of Bus ~,np n (jI'A5k 6,+4am) e1Ge~2(~l'1 tfi'J- - 4/4 (GGGG~~E~t .x a d_ e/G. ©J~~ elG92G92(~/I72~L, , 17t W. D., A. C4. O. 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PRN~ MA9-c+I la3~ al ~ ~~cI~J 2_'~_21Zf ~'s2 R12J2J21~.2T~R_f2I21Z2J2J212f2JZPrJ2f2 N S ~I "'WON ~f I SENIOR YEAR 1830-Iq3( _ CAP-TAIN COMMAND. ,N) CC"B" SIGNAL CORPS C.S. 6RSiN xrR- my SECO"'ri_COMMANO + ROOM -1N1,'-4T1Z` M-L' BENKE - MY isr ~ERGeNr~T FtsH' F.G.McCLORIC1N' ~tsH" W,P, PRAC-aER MY ORDERLIES P00M _ H-3 MART HALL AT TO DO WITH THE DIPLObIA t. Sell it to a freshman as a sheep- skin. He'll think he's buying a winter coat and will pay you real money for it. 2. Keep it in your room. It serves as an excellent varnish preserver- when carefully placed under a gin bottle. 3. Have it framed. After all, you were framed for four years to get it, 4. Use it to design a drinking cup guaranteed to crumple at the critical moment. The Pullman Company will surely buy out all rights and your for- tune is made. 5. Keep it if you are planning to sell bond,-or wash automobiles. Willieou Prrr'p!e Cow. SIGNAL. CORP5 (x30-`31 M.H.3TEVNART-GAPTAIN CoMNia1NmintG Cc~MVfin ~ Co. 8 M.L. BENKE - 1sT SERGrFHNT -LT4, rJ suffaaa a ~J It 4,v lirr-olArut of t4r ~~~~C11't1T1tI'~1~L~`~ flri~n 11a all lrktaa ollul.l Orr t4vilo" 4111eornto #VrAinxi:.ltxwul ur '-fala P ? a r `zoinf~r~>l_~ ~ ~ ~~z 1` CORPS OF CADETS a THE AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS lo /wj2 aJ drip 0nz nla 'o , onn fycor an, jnri~~/iurra~ r?c arr c3Q ors; r~r l r~iz< en~oJcft~re t~ir~ rreJ ~Q trQ,1L ~1[ cJlzP u ~/z/ >/yf doY/'//l749 /(~/0 /I(r// 1(7017/1 Cl0 ,s .f co rrr nurnc x0o r.J fC, o/Jc/'z lil ezi Xr lE'I" .GRICULTURAL AND tiZEGHANIt3AL 'ATION,TEXAS,f~u~1 PRESIDENT 1 I n fI I i III T v 11 AI t3. 1 "I Ll 71 jj 7 ~ r dI I.'A(al", ARROW POINTS TO /V1 Y, ROOM (14 -3) MAIN f3UILDIN G FROM E E. j3UjLpIN6r PF 14OWLOOKIN(x DOWN MAIN I KIVE aOME FIVAE IN M AY Fl~orv~ MAIN 1301LOINO 1x10"~"HER~ DA'i 1H3! i ~ I i • 1P ffl- rL OF PYAk'T AxT, k ..4F + f MA.~ 1431 HL ML -BMW_ soft- MAJIV BOUVINCT- i A HItLL L-KY ;,IAbl-t L. N [RANG E rr 1 nAIw gUILDIN~i 7 t F. 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Gu ok -s up I I me if i l 'bit WIalm III ;a MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM SAN ANTONIO. po ^RRRCph~ I ii ii ii 4 it I , 5~ ~r ~ h' I, i i n z Z 171i k~~~ Q N 5 ' V' qq I k SIJ FY'f ;,k y Q 0 a \ 7- c` r. 1 , Ti• 1 T „ J~ 1 Y UNDER SIX FLAGS. SHOWING ALAMO. BUILT 1716. SAN ANTO `7 ,i Y~ t. .~'A ?\AA4. 19 031 i 0 M J r K,T~ (.~;~1 L i ~I ERNEST FARQUHAR, A. ~ M. ~ItESHMAN, DIES h'ROM FOOTBALL INJURIES Ernest E, Farquhar, '21, of Jonesboro, Texas, a hreshman student at A. & M. and a star on the Freshman football squad, died in a Temple hospital on the morning of Nov. 17, following injuries received in foot- ball practice here several days before. Farquhar, an end, was iujured Tuesday afternoon and taken to the College hospital. He apparently was not seriously injured but became worse and was sent to Temple accompanied by the College nurse and his brother, Sergeant W. W. Farquhar of the U. S. Air Corps on duty here, Tho death, the first casualty of its kind ever suffered at A. & M., plunged the whole campus and student body into gloom. Memorial services by the entire student body were held Thursday afternoon, attended in a body by both the Varsity and Freshman football squads. A number of Farquhar's team-mates, Coaches Bible, Higginbotham and Anderson and other College officials and students attended the funeral. Farquhar was an outstanding man, He was passing in every hour of work carried, his demerit sheet in the Commandant's office was en- tirely blank and he was Working his way thru school. His death has caused the whole Student Body and faculty to grieve and the Former Students will grieve with his family over the loss of so fine a man. --..r-.s.,.- Texas A. & 1VI. Exes To ' Ilonor Coach D, X. Bible Appreciation Banquet to Be Held In Fort IYorth ➢iarch 9 FORT WORTH, Jan. 9.-(AP)-' Texa,> A. and Iuf, exes from all parts is assn names gen lntonio, Dallas ani fed to send large gie exes to the of 'legations are ex :r cities. Fully 6a coaches, the Texa; and athletic coun a PATRONS ARE REgU1;5TED TO FAl'OR THE COMPANY SY CRITICISh1 SERVICE a fulLrate nr C ship. NEWCOMO CARLTON• Pn[9,o[NT SAN3ENIT0 TEx NOV 1 ~'1~5 9UV I E STE ~'N+RT SITYCITY TEx DEATH OF C. W. EDDINS IS RESULT OF ACCIllENT. Death came to our friend and classmate yesterday afternoon as the insult of an accident while returning from drill. Carlton Wilbur Eddins, 21, of Kerrville, Texas, was the son of G. R. Eddins of Kerr- ville. Eddins teas a ,iunior in D troop Cavalry. The accident occurred while the troop was retm•ning from drill when Eddins horse became unruly. His horse bumped into another and knocked a boy off and then started to rear up and Eddins jumped but failed to clear him enough to be out of the way as he came back over nn him. Death was instantaneous. The body has been sent to the home at Kerrville where burial will be held Thursday. A firing squall of nine men has been sent by the college to conduct a military funeral. P. R. Redfern will blow Taps for the last time far Eddins. E. R. Torn has been sent as a representative of his troop i❑ the absence of his troop commander, Judson Neff. Eddie, as he was known by all, had made many friends be- cause of his wimting personality and friendly disposition toward everyone He had worked most of his way through school by employ- ment at the Power Plant and knew what sacrifice was but he was determined to get his education in spite of all obstacles. In his pass- ing we have lost a friend who was appreciated and loved by all. pR~~~®r~fl BAT S[1BSCRIPTION CQNTEST AT END B Company Signal Corps Wins Honor Of Putting Out Special Bat. Due largely to the untiring efforts of Bob Boykin, first sergeant of Com- pany B, Signal Corps, that organiza- tion finished the campaign for extra subscriptions leading al] other organ- izations, bed by Boykin, B Company alarmed in enough subscriptions to bring their standing up to 125 per cent. In other words, B Company av- eraged more than one extra subscrip- tion per man. Organizations that have won the coveted honor of publishing the spe- cial edition have put out some excel- lent magazines, but B Company has announced its intention of hatring the best issue of all. Boykin had splendid teamwork and cooperation from his company, but their final success was due also to the drive carried on by the first sergeants. As the result of this team work and leadership there will be Company B, Signal Corps, special this:; year, Ivaco are expected to send large delegations oP Aggie exes to the af• ~ fair, Smaller delegations are ex• ' petted from other cities. Fully 000 arc expected. AIf conference coaches, the Texas A. and M. faculty and athletic coun- cil will be invited. „ ~ O~CEO~ISTO GIVE _ HUNT ACHIEVES NATION-WIDE AGGI~S N~DD ~IGO~ F:1ME I l~ Through his 91-yard run fora (J:13.[E 6ATUTtn:1Y TO BP I~1ST touchdown after receiving the ball on ~ 011E OF ~F.~1K AT HOME a kickoff in the game at College Sta- " ' ~ f1_ "C ~ FOIL FAR1IPItS. lion Oct. 15 with the Arkansas Razor- ~ ' ~ backs, Captain Joel Hunt of the Texa= r, ~ v ` College Station, Tex., Nov. 11.-On Aggies stepped into the front ranks I ~ ~ ~ the invasion of the Rice Owls of of grid stars whose names appear in ' ~ ~i. Coach Claude Rothgeb from Houston the list of famous runs, r a Saturday, Nov. 17, the Texas A6gles ~ ~ ~ of Coach Dana Rible x•111 play their Hunt's feat was made all the more ; : ~ last game of the season on ILyle field. unique in that it came immediately ~ The suhseyuent and final game for after he had scored the opening touch- £ ~ the Aggies wilt be the Thanksgiving down of the game in the second quay- ' t ~ Day tilt with the Longhorns at Aus- tcr. On the kickoff that followed, he- ~ ° • ~ tin' received the ball on his own three- r ` ~ ~ The clash with Rice promises to afford nn interesting battle since both yard line and raced like a greyhound ~ te>ims wilt be fighting to make up as through the whole opposing network " ninth as possible fn the final stages of Razorbacks, to score his second M cite emiferenco race for reverses in touchdown within a eriod of five P the early part or the season. 'roe game wilt start half an ~,rlter minutes or less. 1 HUN I Cupt.. ` • tt,4q usual, Z:30 having been fi::ed as In the list of "Famous Runs" from ' ~ i the starung time. i 1873 through the last season, appear- ~ ' t~~,'.,~ e- While a sur,~y oY scores of Agg Owl games Of recent y~...rs shows the inglllg 111 Spalding'5 DfI iCla] FOOtball - ~y J':. ' • Aggtes leading In number of vs,cories Guide for 1927 and compiled by Parhe ~i',; 't ir. also shows comparatively smau ~ H. Davis, is the name of a lone Texas ' ~ a ~ ~'-tF.f~ acmes fur the Aggies hr contrast with player, J. V. Sikes, of the Texas Ag- - t _ • i t ~ - scores against other teams. Last sea as the onJ> Ri t gies, who on Nov. 26, 1925, ran 92 ' , - i ~i1'" ~ , , ~ ~ ce w ance, son, for ins leant, with the exception of T. C. U. yards for a touchdown in the game ; t ` " mot',.~,, i! " against which the powerful chain with the University of Texas played ' s r} ~ 'll plonslup Aggie team did not stun here on Kyle Field. The Aggies won ~ ! , a ~ heavily. The score of that game wa; that game 28-0. Sikes, a three letter q ~ n~l~„'. I + ~ 14 to o. The Owis have won but one game ~ man, is one of the ,regulars of this ~ + , ' from the Aggies since ] 917 though of year's Aggie team, playing end. He ~ ~ mother occasion the two teams bat intercepted a forward pass. for his ~ ~ ~ kid to a i-7 tie. In 1017 the Aggie ~ 92-yard run of 1925. Hunt's run in, won, 10-0. It was ]9211 before th tivo teams stet again and ,he Agg7e the Razorback game gives the South- w'on that gear, 7-0. Tn 19.1 t I, west Conference and the Texas Ag-, tie resulted and in 1922 the Aggie gies another man in the list of fa- made the largest score they have ece ~ ~ run up against the Owls, 24-0. Th ~I m0us funs. following year, 1929, the Oiv1s pu As a point maker, Hunt has started 1 i over their w[n, 7-0. That year, asid t off with a vengeance this Season, In QQ from the seven points scored by RtcF the first four games in which the Ag• ' T only 16 points were made ugatnst th gies have piled up a total of 134 1 ~ ~jj Aggies. In 1924, the Aggtes care points, 45 against Trinity, 31 against 't 1 back to win, lb-6, and in 1925 th Owle held -the Aggio champkmshi Southwestern 18 a ainst Sewauee g' r ~ eleven to a li-0 victory. Lt ]926, th and 40 against Arkansas, Hunt has r ~ 1~ Agglea won, 20-0, white sport fans vvl accounted for a total of 64 points, or ~ + ~ recall that last year's game was n-o nearly half the total. He scored two by the Aggies 14-D• Last year the Aggies faced a Rott touchdowns against Trinity, two 1 geh-coached eleven for the first ttm against Southwestern, all three r This year with the Aggie team weal against Sewauee and three against er than last year and with the Ow ' Arkansas, making a total of ten h r' putting up their usual determine fight against an A. ~ M. eleven, tt touchdowns. He scored in addition i» 6p ~ clash gives promise of a hard tong] these first four games four points af- ~ battle. ter touchdown with place~kicks, two t• ~ against Trinity, one against South- 'f western, and one against Arkansas. va~1cl~ i ac~t,l~,d. ! tC~i!`V 1JC.Jt(A[LJ✓ll SEVEN PpUNJ qpY A~RIVEJ THIS EVENING „,ZLtNE ~pING FINE IU DAM" A GGES PSET PE TO TIE AGGIE TOSSERS DEFEAT MICNO COLLEGE STATION. April 1.- IW)-After winning six straight games from Texas teams, the Notre ),Dame Ramblers were baited Saturday by the Texas Aggies, 7 to 4. The game closed the Alick's invasion of the state. j The Notre Dame defense gave war in teh seventh to let the Aggies put j over the winning runs. A hit, three errors and two walks gave the Texans three runs. Jachym relieved Rust for Notre Dam, to stop the rally. Brooks Conover. Aggie outfielder, clouted his third homer of the season in the first inning. Score. R. H. E. ' Notre Dame Jx)h 110 101- 4 9 6 Aggies ...120 100 30x- 7 8 3 Rust, Jachym and Lordi: Wendt, Pasprowice and Lackey, Harris. A. and M.-Matagorda County Club COLLEGE STATION, Oct. 11 All boys from Matagorda county met last week and formed a coun- ty club. There were 10 boys from this county and we expect to have twice as many next year. The pur- pose is to boost this college in our home towns and to know each other better up here. Election was held and t71e following were elected: M. H. Stewart, St., Captain B Co., Signal Corps. Bay City, president. P U, Lau);htvi:, Jr., Matagorda, P r"~; Tjav City, B Sid s IU.i Notre Dame Noses Out Mustang Team DALLAS, April 6.-(M)-Notre Dame's touring baseballers won their sixth straight victory over Texas col- lege teams when they downed South- ern Methodist university here Friday,' 6 to b. The game was devoid of thrills, both teams erring frequently. Bray led the bucks' attack with a pair of doubles, while Bill smacked three singles in five trips for the D1;. tangs, The Ramblers will close their Texas invasion Saturday against the Texas, Aggiea at College Station. Score: Notre Dame ..211 100 100-6 9 21 S. Al. U......110 000 300-5 7 4' Donohue, Rust and Lordi; Collins' and Drye. BAND GOES TO SCHULENBERG This morning on April 3rd, the Aggie Band left on its second trip of the year via Houston to Schulen- burg, and there the boys will arrive at about eleven thirty A. M. The purpose of the trip is to pla` for the celebration of the opening o a new Borden's Milk Company. There' will also be other bands there from Fort Sam Houston, from Texas University, and from the Shrine Temple at Houston. At about one o'clock there will be n glass parade of the bards and at three o'clock the band from A. c' M. will give r; public concert. The people of Schu- ienburg are going tD hike members of the band into their homes for the neon day meal. With the entertainment by the young ladies and the luteh refresh- ments the boys are assured of a very pleasant trip. NS AGtGIE COACIiES AND CAPTAIN SHEER FIGHT EAR 11 4 BARTLETT `apt..--.1928 LINF_ COACt Texas A0mies 19• DASSET Y' ti ,11 k College Station, Nan. 24.-When' . white irarrior.s for the sc ell 'e of the the Texas Aggies and the Texas game next Wednesday and spend Longhorns clash in their annual the night before the game in Aus- tin. Workout at the Mennirial Thanksgiving Day battle at Austin Stadium there is to be held Wed- this vear, it will be the thirty-fifth nesday afternoon. "Wee Willie" grlfiron engagement between these Bartlett, 192-pound captain of the two hereditary rivals. Aggies will play his last game with Bead Poach Dana S, Bible and the maroon and white in the com- Line Cu,Irii "Ginn^1<" P„ISSett expect iniz conftiet, as this is his third and to entrniu with their maroon and final year on the Aggie team. TIE AGAINST 0 ODDS IN I, guard, was their lip s r. In spite of the tic game, ho •ev the hog ors of the day rest( I w h the Ag gie crew. They out ug t and tied a team admittedly uc their su- perior as far as oot all ability,' weight and speed ar co cerned. The _ only margin the Farmers had was their fight, and how they made ll that count. j It will be a long time before an- other football game in the South-1 west will be played with the thrill and the dash and drama of this 1 game. The huge crowd could easily _ se the superior weight of the Pon- ies, and there was sheer drama in - - - the desperate fight of Bassett's line F1 to stop the heavy charging of the l Pony backs. Time after time the r~ Ci~ M'ustangs marched deep into Aggie Noncoms territory and time after time they Texas. A& M. d336 Are "romoled Front Raliks for Session of 1928.29. special to The News, COLLLU h; STATION, Texas, Sept, S.-Three hundred and thir- ty-six noncommissioned officers li•ive been promoted from the ranks by ordar of Lieut. Col. C. J. Xclson, commandant, wilth the ap- proval or Presiaent. T. 0. At'a,lton at A. $ yL college of Texas for 1928- 19-9 session, t. 1 'Phe list as announerxl includes: gin DanF n-Firaf S'Pmennt; R. F. Clan' Inn, oalhm S,-rgenidA: D. 1'. Tunstnll. wneu: U- F. Mitchell. nnllu=; II. i.xird. .ilinrrnl wills: L. I'awlrr, shernmul i n, Kuehn. TW,,r: C. 8. Price, Fan Anl"nla: 11. U. Iii, k, wncn: J. Ii. Ilnnen, :U rmrd j L. 1Ceveler lianllom, Coln. Cogmro h; ]t. b Daniel. Cleburne; R', A, Iran: d. A reisni,1s, dlims. Clehurne; }I, stan- L',rn I ham, I'nnre1L M. n. stewnrt, sil: nbnrc: , ti. IL Inlniemi, hllznhrl h, l.u,; E. t1ni1~ hos. Eliazheth, Ln,: '1', ,il, Snr~ll, I'lehnnre. TOP ROW: Left to right-Coach Bible, Martella, Martin, Delery, Phillips, Rowland, Brown, Cuthrell, Harris, Van Zandt, Scovell, Coach Bassett. MIDDLE ROW; Richter, Northcutt, Hable, Davis, Alsabrook, Bartlett (capt.), Petty, Burgess, Sneed, Conover, Zarafonetis. were stopped close to the goal by a stubborn defense that threw caution to the winds and that brought thrills to the tense stands. Twice the Pon- Da ies thought to put the game on ice with scores that, carried them into the lead and each time a desperate Maroon Eleven came back to tie tha,t score in spectacular manner. i, f The A. and M. team last Sa/1z ga' "Couldn't be beat because thea me wouldn't be beat," and all the tle wes t sings their praises this a of Q-z- -r,. ,r:-- H Ell luaurlaeda(I 8utmaut2ua 'SV aql the ut aurtq sill So 3soiu quads pue snd tuea aqq of gtstn quaaaa a ioj ui pad tot -dozp '9Z, `sgaagod ,pj)jo •zam quaaaa aqq eutanp uotlautl wl, lip -sip ggVA PaAZaS utagq 3o Ile put: so sse10 aeM aqq se umoux sassula '14 a Pub 'V aql of Suolaq ,Salty •Atuiv s, ar aqq ut 119m Suiop a'aa uaut anoge aqg [IV •sastaaaxa gleaoatu-ilua lataads aqq Sui.mp spunoz8 uaapaagV aqq qa A4np uo lie azam u0siaJOW Pula 11111 'ggoaaddiM sutugduD '9aallt4aV iseoD 'uostaaoh ,s22ojgo 'N 'Q utagduD put, :quatugaada(l oauaupa0 aql Jo 'LL 'ggaaaddtM paaa utagduD `.sastaza -xo q;a.taatV-!guV Jos daall!gav gsaoD 4si9 aql uq!M epun'oaD 8utn0ad naap -zagV qe st oqm '9I `il!H 'H gdlLH uiuldeD !Sasaaf malq art lauasav uagtzeg aqq qv loogaS gs11ataadS aqq ut P!V aogonagsul si oq& 'LL 'u!-' -zad 'D -V utagduD `.uog2uigsvA ut quatugzuda(I aouaupa0 aqq ui si oqm ',I, '2uilq!a4S ,dtU,, 'B 'S utagduD `,faa11tlaV gsaoD 91, 'stuua(I 'D • I utagduD !uosaas 6Z6I 0114 a01 tuaaq OURI 6a1eneD aqq So utaldea aq llpa oqm pua '•D •Q 'uogguigseM ut pauotl els st A& '91, 'UD11V •2i -H aocuw to gsom '2ulmollol aqq aaam CS3.jdUaLU,W a LL `9I, '9i, aqq 30 szaquiam lo ~SmaV Augur aqg 2uouae qu3Pua 'V aqq 2uoutV ,33.3,k1:0M tuogm;o gloq'LL `gyaazd dt t1'aR ute3deD pua '9i, '11111 Ad uteld'eD oq 8uipzoaae putt Sja,t do spunoa J Slrtnozd noon lag{i uo uo[gazgsuotuacl 03111611 w nna .rannlarl uo DtaU SUM BOTTOM ROW: Floyd, Tracy, Ewell, Mills, Biffel, Colgin, Ish, Dorsey, Bible, Sessions, Woodman HEAD COACH NBLE w J,Y" e , A i C02 cmw 1 a~ lox r~ COM W W L&J III i 16.4 w 1~ ~T r Ile ~W t I~ r !L CD cd ^Cf ~ d oo~„a ~ 1~1 v~ " u ~c H J , O - d EI 'r' o PEI 01 ei ~ V 2 W~~~•~ I+U ® V sV^_ 1S~ FEU WZ5 .J 4 C4 0 ro Y Y N d Y 0 O d Y .C V Y " .a w y rn G W y v d~0 d U V d d •O w bD U O 00 O c~C O U Cl v O W t Y F F. d d -4 yY, y' a~ v o ^O x u V 67 ' ~ V7 ~ Y A O .•i C :C ix-, F Y ~ d O x 'b N Y ~ G A i, ~ S CJ vi cG cC u x 3 4-p cus O c " O pa +x. ~ G d ro ~ Y ~ F 3 a v o> d Y o w 'a y ~ d m cFC A Y u-0 Gi a to o x +x' G r~ c~+ v cN3 o w Y F o co3 . p c ro r+"J1 Obf, p y 4-4 C R7 8 m F ro v G u„ ac tk 1-4 C's p F PC F' y u c;;x x cs ro u u p a >w A 0 o x Y H o ~ a w z o_ o ~ p U2 d x ^v Y o ~ f~_ ~ F Y O O O U v Lt+ x ? N~ o 11 O RS O CJ w .C O i. v. /,1 r_O ~ ~ ~~UGG^~ Ural y-. {.L/"=iA G O O O L". qC~ =ate ~~~iy--_-'~•__ _ FBI C C ^l c 12 O C, ~r O 61 x: o o 75 t C, .O c! v ✓F'Gir7~,Gnr:C ~ 11 (y n G{ ~ r r y Q- ffnn 41 C I VJ P~ E, Q1 1 f C if c fr~ " 1) 5 7 I . , t cd 'o ;1.1 mz g) 41:11 Cc, Gr C •b.C L+ C, m a o r o U w u 3" o a' a o o o o d o• C x T ~ U] Y o w~ Y ~ ~ O O F o o~ p a~ r oG y ~ r c ai O C W y Y Gi m N O 4-+ '"".''x-i bA Y F Y H y O G O p~ O al ;-4 • ~ ~ Cq O O P' ID p w V x 'ya y br ° x G x .Q H a x o ~ ~ w~~ L w o r ~ c C, o a w ca H w H e c. o > •p atl c .d aJ O w p p 1+ q r0 M y co m O W M w N m v n w a> O~ W 4, tp no _y Pei aI ♦d b O N `d ~'d'y 8.19 I I ~ ~ of 10-' a P " tc W, El 0 r v_ d an.~ a f mE- cd P o es o G bu a G y,~ ' O w" 0 F U x b O O ~ C✓ ~ F C Y+V F Pa W ~ P4 O Y Qi CC v Y ^y O A d A Y F y^ cC v x Y x ~ U x Y O cC O C> U x o F, Y a a U, ~ F P4' o a a N Q N H ~ r~i O C wF„ CL O C 'C U y0 O t y 't "'d, ~ ° u w o ~ C Er a) 7 IC > P~ CjW u a P~H ~A L) ~oLfU ~ ~ ~ ~ x y u o ~ •°7~j:?.' ~ 0.l ~ ~ ~ ~ o c. Pa ~ z ~ 050 ct M `erg 3~ oWv1~•'~_ u aL~W~m F~c > 7.E 0 Wmc~~n°°ya6a ad'i`5~s` =~y~a U Cs w 3 e" c c > ^ C: Q, a° 0c cs U e i7~ d o~i~ ~U ~P 1 1 t \c, otball ability. Before the game was two minutes old the Farmers had seht the huge throng into a frenzy. Dorsey returned the Mustangs kick-off from his own goal line to the Mustangs own 38- yard line, a thrilling 62 yard run. On the second play Davis tossed a perfect pass to "Pinky" Alsabrook who took the oval on the dead run and crossed the Pony goal untouched. From there on the game was a suc- cession of thrills until the final min- utes when the Aggies came from behind to tie the score and then barely miss winning the game. Each team collected three touchdowns and failed to kick two of their goals af- ter touehodwns. Outweighed tremendously in the line and in the backfield as well only the fighting spirit of the Aggies kept the game from being a slaugh- ter. Stung by their 39-13 defeat at Kyle Field last year Morrison's men were out for vengeance over what had been hailed as this year's weak Aggie team. Time and again the heavy S. M. U. backs plowed thru the light Aggie line for substantial gains. Time and again they com- pleted dazzling passes and reeled off spectacular rune. But time and again the Aggie line repulsed them from the goal line and time and again the Aggie team rose to super- heights to meet the game and the scoring of their opponents. Out of the excitement of the game stand a pair of substitudes to receive well-earned laurels. Big John Cuth- rell, a substitute tackle and Field Scovell, a substitute guard. As the heavy Mustangs ripped the Aggie line to shreds they were sent into the fray. As the game progressed they got better. Cuthrell blocked two kicks and Scovell stopped drive af- ter drive through the Farmer line. Every man on the A. and M. team was a hero. Zarafonetis backed up the line in marvelous fashion, kicked well and received one of the passes for a touchdown. Every member of the Farmer team played the game of their lives. Dana Bible took Ray Morrisin's own weapon, the forward pass, to tie the score and mar the record of a really great Mustang eleven. Three times the Farmers scored through the air. Statistics of the game reveal many more first downs for the Mustangs than for the Ag- gies, and many more yards gained from scrimmage. These same sta- two returns of kickoffs by the stir tillating Dorsey that turned the tid of the battle twice to carry the ba: from A. and M. territory deep int the Ponie's side. There was not a Aggie fumble not blocked kick whil those disasters were happening twit to the Mustangs. The starring was not all on th, side of the Aggies. Ross Love am Fincher proved the big guns in thi Mustang offense and Sanders, gian- guard, was their line star. In spite of the tie game, however, the hon ors of the day rested with the Ag gie crew. They outfought and tie( a team admittedly much their su perior as far as football ability weight and speed are concerned. Th( only margin the Farmers had waE their fight, and how they mad( that count. It will be a long time before an- other football game in the South- west will be played with the thrill and the dash and drama of this game. The huge crowd could easily see the superior weight of the Pon- ies, and there was sheer drama in the desperate fight of Bassett's line to stop the heavy charging of the Pony backs. Time after time the Mustangs marched deep into Aggie territory and time after time they were stopped close to the goal by a stubborn defense that threw caution to the winds and that brought thrills to the tense stands. Twice the Pon- ies thought to put the game on ice with scores that, carried them into the lead and each time a desperate Maroon Eleven came back to tie tha+ score in spectacular manner. The A. and M. team last Satur 1 "Couldn't be beat because they/,, wouldn't be beat," and all the ~ ill west sings their praises this pet ~~xton~o9 n cm o m r~o~~~~NG a m ro ti y m c_ m yin m ~O z1?oalCbua7as n' »y~ (Dup~U1 w mommnr .-O l/~I m cos C m o ° C" l m r c ~]a0 o M~o o p q yID tr o r ~ uq C2 CD min (A eD Y m ° wy Dpo`< m o- n g pcDq O 91 FrmncomCDP: Cttl~' 0 P 14 IT (D V pq~?nw~ti~ ri~j p 7q ^ o°~O ~O p m x p w m ►o m w n R nt o p C"] 3~y n Lz]C]`~ G W m UyG~ O p m n o ^ 13. c. ID a,po mC r°ri . = • Gy• n y `rnq m c. K y t m L~ , Ci 'C o o c o ° c y y w 0 I'D S, 0 ° _ o C, Z 7 n o o S. C a m +i y td CD a~ ~ o 3 A o~~ o ci. m m ti. w er D R M C C O 1-h CD p o 0 0 , m a cr m C m O tCii c0+ M (D m 7 m fi c+ o ~ m m O Cr r.~ y rr 'u' o M rr cr a' m o A> O ~ k o' ~ ~ ,•,v6~s-_---'~~ ~G ro s GJ Y CAD N r. W M nu a(P . cr 7q 3-, m ~ CD 7 r g N ~ CD e:+ > )'Q 9 x~ K~ C~ m F~ LD) " o m J~ O ,p p c =,D "cCD > ~ a4 y o m o N m m o 0 m fD ~ ~ ~y m M ~ o c+ m ' o % o p a t3, a ~s C --T rn C-i m O rn Y. C o p 0 0 O y r ICJ a CJ a ~ O ~ s. o o ~ rr. ^ C 0 m O T y y C y o CL o 7 o o O .'3 PD r x n •r. I C er b 'j R. e* C m m w ' om' .T• C A~ m o m y m C m C/] py G N o::r m R fi o' o m M cl O o Y c m rn (D 7q y A Z K ~m B ° Yn a n rO ~ G p Do w ~ y m ~ Y o CL 19 =r (D In (D ID 0 rq n CA r' vmi p- m o m w ro d OG m n O m Al C E ti O n m o n m m o o d a G. pphi~ m n m m vq G e m F, o O 'D 4 'D a m °Q. C o °y t+ m m~ P~ fD m p o C. 0 C* Or ~ I 1 SOUTHWESTERN CHAMPIONS 1927 The Aggie Cross-Country Team v~~Sgl+' 8 i _ mayy,, ? g " y~t~ 5QQ A A" . ~vt . aP. ;wMf9'. eP 0 4 Q 3 LEFT TO RIGHT: Moore, Haile, Capt. Childers, Shoemaker, Killian, Avila, Thompson, Coach HEADS CADETS J. ll, Taylor, Dallas. elect,•ical engineering senior at 1. and M. College of Texas, lugs bren pro- tnoted to the rank of cadet colo- nel, making him the racking cadet officer of the corps for the uew academic year. Graduating Class a At A. & M. largest In School's flistory nY A,,, nciat^d Preza in ~ {Ij_ Collage Cation, May 30,-C. E. u_ Calder, president of the American he and Foreign Power Company, New he fork, today told 357 graduat«,s at n~ the fifty--fifth commencement at ge A. and M. College that the right to ad realzo an his own ability and nr iuitiative Yvas one of the greatest d vosr:essions of American yruth. lie in cited conditions in Soviet Russia as illustrating the result of the stifling pi of personal initiative. Tho graduating glass was the s largest in the history of the col_ le.°e. President T. U• Walton opened the commencement pro- gram- Marvin Hays of Mount Pleasant delivered the valedictory. P. M. Law of Houston, president of the board of directors, conferred the degrees. Ia the list of 39 distinguished i_ seniors. J. H. Quisenberry of Good- 1Q left led with a total of 333 grade paints, the highest at the college in 10 years. Magicians' Society, a r. Y 13 r~ T ii t n i. f , ri u ll I Fi i sl b. ' L t. a o ,Di • 0 1 OLD TRADITIONS SHOULD BE FOLLOWED ONLY SO LONG AS THEY ARE TIMELY. DANA X. BIBLE Head Coach A. & M. College of Texas D. X. Bible, head coach at A. & M. College since 1917, is a Tennesseean and graduated from Carson- Newman College, Jefferson City, Tennessee, where he received his football training. In the ten years as head coach he has turned out five championship teams. In 1921 his team defeated the famous Centre College team that had laid claims to the National Champion- ship, having won the Southern flag, defeated Harvard and won on the west coast. However, Bible's most brilliant team was the 1927 aggregation, led by Joel Hunt. In addition to his job as Head Coach, Bible repre- sents the Southwest as a member of the National Football Rules Committee. Dana Bible is not always the leader, but you can depend on him to match anything the leaders might spring. He is truly a great coach and sportsman and Texas always looks forward to the time when they can meet a Bible coached team on the gridiron. GGIES WIND UP SEASON Are Crushed by Brilliant of Inspired Cadet Eleven In 1 Turkey Day Came, 13 to 0 at Aggieland. but 1 to 96 as Melgnlflcant u 1 IN BLAZE OF GLORY ('..XPI %III '(),NI H ild,11, '(III( RICHTER '.I I;ne+beck Lando ,yam defeats in. of de down tits ngooJi'ras cheat }t••le ckings lik enoasb to tiu Ibmc h rst con- _ went 0 o O ~lowm" Bur~nctt~s acked~~illid for 1 I..g Broken- no galn on three tries, ollching him s suffered a severe Jolt on for a 2-yard loss on tho third at- 9 first play of the game, for tees pt. It seas fourth down with Beaty, guard, Playing his last it, yards to a.. The next Play was fur the ()range and Whit', an attempted lateral pass, but hiscright des )n tl:u xcctI._ of E'crkiaa bdicd down the Lall, and ,hhmt he rec eived the it want over to Texas on i's 15- g klckoff and returned it. yard 11 c. declared to be lino first time The Texas line aros0 to tremen- ar that Beaty has carried the .cishU to stop the deicing nd it was his last. Ha Aggtes .°!d with a touchdown -P- I ao vlci.-IY that he wilted Paren,ly~ cinched. T•ho Aggies had ground, broken and out of four downs to make three yards. ama bete,. It had even but Instead of gaining three, they lost 13 on four tried. even the lost of Beaty could Mille Passed to Conover for a 17- ce l ecked the Texas team Yard grin ...and left end after a Aggles wrecked it T•hureda Y. couple of bueils hud gained three [ up 15 firs[ [towns to 9 for yards, gicing the Aggle. the hall on n almrns, Interceptlag Long- the Steer 37-yard line. A long Pass passes with regularity that an the next Ptoy was Ime-eDted II the starch out of a Texas hYIle a oln tit e... 25 lhe o dII.P. hat could never get started, ,ad ' lay swung back the other .Aline the Steer La kfield ins to shreds waI erklna Pulled eat back aster of tirr.Palax : AThe through center fora 252'it gain ...e t° rct Lh° ball to mid Held, w'hen•. threatened: the Ag- g"ul. Three pdn aeea and n r spra>' on the g " r'1 Penalty w' rot enough k line that narked s,in If rst down send the hall , goal lino rIw'I ce Lc- rin the Aggles on their own ly got o and Ilse. A lal,k kirk shoved a ac bolt hack to the I.ongh.rn 20-1 red cadets `had tallied of line, and the Cadets .hewed a ,c ega decisive bye way yena gain when the ,In n punt reac seas . ea.n ll, is eueceas, the Aggie f6-Yard strips atty Bell's LO0.rn w'On O O O oe genes. AggIM Fell once More. the defeat w80 lust Prom this point, the Aggles In oaewrn li,leer s - Dock wit h. Baylor andrn the hands of T. C. U. The ~Wly hed a .;Leer , e11.sIlk" a met and .e trot years cd?nd;,r. 0 0 0 ,,,bail Day. ondcrful day for foot. ens Lrlr le ton warm far ,ot of t1', There Thun~iap •m„ndna. wr sneered score sx 13 Ia In is favor al the pef. But the (.oaghorns never ry a _d ie see sad the result 13 [o'0 to facer of Tatty I fiablcrx. ;horn" Get Break, Muff IG the second half, the Long-~ e kicked off, and the Aggles) the ball in play on their 25- line. -Line pl. ngea fulled, and E ,ded off left tackle, but and Shelley recovered n the Cadet 39-yard ctna faked a Punt and nt for a first do,% on 29-yard line. Th. next t Jul xa ndMills inter. r"n Ii buck to his o where be ,.a chased , ea. pass. yl ills to Tracey L, s sued for nine yard,. rwn bucked to Vo, Texaa rug, no g run East was finally ended by Shelley. O O O A64o" 60otb. 11111. pealed to Tracey for 19 yards, and again the Aggles bad first down on the Te... 3-yard lino. This time, the Aggles were not to be dens Pd. although It to uked for a while as thoash the way. n" be ghee c in snip cos .d 20 times 6,tfl st-Wools were in the stands, All the color and glamour of the nllual 'Texas-A. and M. meeting as evident from early morning, hen the first arrivals began to it the usually orderly campus. By on. the school grounds were a etY,Ing mass of rabid partisans tad Houston, Dallas, Austin, Fort orth, San Antonio, Louisianaand herever Texas and Aggie former ents could muster the fare to tend this game of all games in e Southwest. The game was preceded by dedi- tury addresses that marked the rural opening of the new Aggie 60,000 stadium, concrete horse- oe shaped stand that will seat proximately 35,000. The sell-out the stadium that was anticipated i the Thanksgiving Day game s not realized, for gaps in the awd appeared at each end of e horseshoe. O O O ody Speaks. The chief address was delivered Governor Dan broody, who was en a rousing ovation when he Pped to the loud-sneakers to lnmemorate the christening of new stands. Others who par- ipated in the ceremonial were esident T. O. Walton of Texas A. cl M. college; 1'. Dr. Lacy, Hous- 1) "Sident of the board of diree- s of Texas A. and Ill.; Dr. H. Y. ..edict; president of the Univer- y of Texas; 11. J. Lutcher Stark, ange, member of the board of ents, University of Texas; Judge Lee Bobbitt, attorney general of a S. he bands of the rival schools aded while the stands rose to er. The Aggies kicked off to the eers, who defended the south goal, Beaty, Texas guard, received the kickoff and ran it back to the Steer 35-yard line. Beaty was hit rtl hLUIP tackle. and was carried om the heltr, his leg badly in- ed on the first play. Emerson laced hint. fter Mills had ripped through ter on a cutbnak play, for 17 ds, the Agsies punted deep into Texas territory', but Shelley and Beular began to pick 1104es in the A. and INT. line, the former skirt- Ing rii ht end for 20 yards and the latter sneaking" through right guard for 13 more. O o O Steer Drive Stoppeil. Three plunges by Shelley and Beular gave the Steers another first down Axzgie 40-yard line, but Magrill and Moulded, C-Me' t^cklea. smeared Beular and Shelley for losses of five yards, decisively- stop- ping the drive. The Aggies put the ball back in play on their own 20-yard line, and Conover kicked tight back. The Agsies began chargin„ fast and hard. and the Steers punted to A. and 3I. on its 30-card stripe. Tommy Mills stepped off 20 y>ud~. cuttin insit:e left end, c,nd Zarnfonetis It was In. egg field. at punched the ball' n Its 25-5ardline. cut, but to, n k 15-Ya \"Ining im"rere Ie't awd the ASSics 1 Lhc Texas 19-Y rd Ili' d o pass to conov ad then Milli, sot el 1 fur ..file n \t'the l 11 o r for fir. Teens 1E-yard line. 0 0 0 Tonle. triple Pass that the r using then brong'' ,~lal1Y In short ord, to [;ounce r, w'ho 1, noraeY. a„rsey 'right end fora tau L loukrd try' f' `hCn Argirs 13. s nnl`[he bail i„ PIr l hue. An Asgle Per u-d:: nd Pee:.. B o Lhc •l ,•rs ..rat tJ,r I:eularci:-rd l• 13 yrrle and the A Inc for mo"!"r fir. It was the .kgg,e eau on in,,, cent 21-pattl llnc, end they w to defend tltc•Ir lead, kicking cut Op the next Idle Tcxaa .la cl ,hc bull on its own 43-ynd her C'„novrr intercepted a pa.a hiv o n 47-Yard Ill- ga the game (ended. The line..Da: A_ried. Poeilion. Texas. Traci Be. I,c Find. yfa grill . . .....Drown, Capt. I.It Tioblet }lawn . ...I... Guard. ..Burnett Brawn .;enter er. heist..:,. it, Beaty gnt cu:era Mauldin narg,.W Might Tuckle. ~Aisabrook Cheatham lilght kind. Mills, cant uses QuarterL:,cl<. Conover Shelley Lett Flnlf. rmyd Beard night half. Deulat' Zarafonetla O}flclala-Ttef Tree: Meyer (T. (Ohio I'm \ d L'.). State). Head d l I nes a"'nnt.: Meson (Sew::nre). F'ieitl ludsc: Frasier (Bnylcr). Score by PPll.d-:^ c-1x on Plr of , r telling to Brilliant Victory Over Long) CAPTAIN PLUS GREAT TEAM PLAY THRILLS THIRTY THOUSAND FANS By ANDY Sport writers of Texas will be digging up a lot of old-time stock phrases today. "An inspired Aggie team, etc,," or "an A. and M. team rose to superhuman heights," and old stand- bys like that. And any one of the old stock leads might well serve as a start in telling the story of Texas A. and M.'s 13 to 0 victory over the Texas Longhorns yesterday afternoon at fNle e Station 46 g Team Work Does It But after calm deliberation there is but one thing to attribute the glorious Aggie victory to-team work. True, Wee Captain Tommy Mills played miraculous football. And Brooks Conover flashed the greatest form of his career and Pinky Alsabrook played the sort of football that made him famous as a high school player at Cisco. ' But it was team play that did the trick. It was a perfectly coordinated line which was a monument to the coaching ability of Matty Bell that made possible all of these glorious feats by Mills, Alsabrook, Jelly Wood- FIRST man and Conover. Thirty-one thousand fans roared their approval as the final gun SECOND ROW: Magi-ill, ell, 0•, Phillips. H., Conover, B., DolerY, H., Alsabrook, P., Mills, T. Zarafonetis, G.• i;ichter, sounded C., Floyd, G. , Tracy, A., Guseman, 0. Shelley Falters THIRD ROW: J. B. Reid (Coach), Carl Sprague (Trainer), Anderson, C. H. C.. Emmons, W., Christian, J.• M:- Texas fetus were disappointed. They expected more of Dexter Shelley, the fleet Austin boy, but the Aggies had him nailed to the sod. They Fadden, P., Moulden, C., Abbey, D. R., Holmes (C" oach), Bell (Coach). i made him hurry what few punts he attempted and they turned out (FOURTH ROW: Overton, Al. C., Van Zandt, R.. Harris, J., Brown, J., Dawson, O., Hill, 'I'., Varnell, J. R, tNloser, .4. rather miserable failures. Perkins and Nona Rees played best for the Steer backfield. Eddie Beular, stocky line plunger, played well but his to throw passes in the last few minutes of play indicated that) ff t ` y 1 e or s the Aggies had been well drilled in a defense against this. No doubt the Texas defense against the forward pass was badly the first play k n l o b t i ( r 1 ry GGIE~ THE CROSS COUNTRY A ro n ned a e eg y susta wrecked when Curtis Bea of the game. The Wichita Falls boy received the kickoff and tried to return it. Graceton Floyd, Aggie backfield man, dashed down the field and tackled him. Then and there the doctors were called and he was soon carted off CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM KEET to the hospital. ON, ..,.1.. 1- A; A Nni- 0- Lava+- of +I o TPvn. nn.CC rTP{P"KP. In Praise of A. eke M. '"How can a fellow get mad enough to fight when these Aggies are just so darn polite?" a football ob- server from the camp of the Centenarians of Louisiana .-remarks, with reference to the team of the Agricul- tural and Mechanical College of Texas. The Shreve- port Times, in the sporting column of Joe R. Carter, quotes him further: It's hard deliberately to run over an opponent with { power plays when he's there waiting with a smile, as i though to say, "Don't get hurt." It's hard to knock him down when you know he's going to get up and help you to your feet. And in comment upon this Mr. Carter himself remarks: "They do say as how the Aggies treat all of their friendly rivals in such a splendid manner. -One-half of the student body is at the train to greet the arrivals and the other half is waiting at the foot- ball field to give the visitors a rousing cheer. They paraded Dr. Sexton, president of Centenary College, and his committee around Kyle Field during the half of the ball game, and the cheers for Shreveporters, echoing from the east section of the field, sounded like a roar from a volcano." Now there are far, far worse things that could be said about a team and about a school behind such a -j team, A. & M. has lost some football games this year, and in other years, for that matter. Yet A. & M. on fat more than the game against Centenary in their-last meeting. on the gridiron, as the foregoing , praise will show. But even though they have time for gentlemanly conduct in the course of a game, the team never lived that found a session with A. & M. a pink tea. Don't be deceived on that point, 1_-11 11 1 , 11.V11 F1 - I1.:. 1:11i Texas linesman tried to tackle him he tossed the ball to Conover, who 4 was already under full speed. Conover rambled across for another score. Stadium Not Filled Two sophomore tackles earned themselves undying fame. Carl Moulden and Otey Magrill outplayed the Texas linesman in practically every play. o y ;.k Richter and Chirtsian proved far more effective than any players Texas a t ' sent in at guard. s O17 nly twice could the Aggie line be criticized, and then minutely. With touchdowns in sight the line permitted Brown and Burnett to come .=eo/fi through and smear Aggie attempts. It was a typical colorful Texas-A. & M. crowd. Thirty-me thousand fans saw the game, a disappointing crowd considering the fact that the 1 = day was perfect. There were many good seats left. Both schools went through their usual drills and did them perfectly. The Aggie kerchief Perkins, Winders. ( apt-Ehct), Michael, Shoemaker, (('apt.), Smith. Grii'ti< Hmvard, Anderson (Coach). exhibition was followed by formations by the Texas band and cowboys. - - - - These demonstrations took place between halves. Considering the crowded conditions, everything was well handled. , Aggie-land Cadets, aided by 27 of Houston's best traffic officers. han- dled the foot and auto traffic with the least possible confusion. The crowd was excellently behaved. There were few signs of liquor ~g flit' vast crowd. The same is true of passengers on the trains. AGGIES. Pos ions. LONGHORNS. Tracy L.E................... Rose Margill L.T...................... Brown (c.) Richter L. G........................... Hawn Brown C. Burnett Christian.. R. G........................... Beaty Moulden R. r Hargrove, Alsabrook R . Cheatham Mills (c.) Q.B............................ Rees Conover L. 3......................... Shelley Floyd ............................R. -1 Beard Zarafonetis F. 3.......................... Beular Officials: Referee-Meyer (T. C. U.). Umpire-Winters (Ohio State). 9,eadlinesman-Braun (Sewanee), Field Judge-Frazier (Baylor). Honor Student Bay City friends are proud of the) record 1N4ortimer Stewart has Blade in Texas A. M. College. He graduated from Jefferson Da- vis High School of Bay City in 1927 and entered Texas A. & M. that fall. In the opening of 11125 session he was appointed corporal of his com- pany and won a beautiful modal fqr being the hest drilled cadet. He was also vice president of the Methodist Student Council. Fall term of 1929 Mortimer en- tered into his years work as ser- geant of Company B. He designrd a change in the style of the class ring, the emblems re- maiuuilhe s .anre but it now has , the full Parne of the college instead of the Initials and year it was or ganized. The change was accepted by the board and the new 1ui, s i made this spring. Last week Mortimer received a letter from college advising him that he had been appointed cap- twin in command of Company B Signal Corps for his senior yeas. So we are looking forward with great pleasure to his senior year and )tope he may be honor student in the graduating class of 1931. This college was organized !u IS76 and has done a great work, but we always take more interest in schools when we have loved ones iu them. Ags Hand Trouncing to Baylor, 31 told BY 1110S MELTON. Drill ill pisiug featured the T. C. Ilorned b rogs' basket hall pray lice Tuesday allernoou as they pre- pared fur their si:,"III game of the year With the Buybn• Bears in Waco .n[• urdar night. Thr• Bears took a sound heating from the Nggivs Tues. day night „ ap nht at uillegr tilatinn, 31. to I_, but that fact is nut Illcely to lull the Frogs into stale of unpreparedness. 'I.'he_ Boars hold Airt,,ries over the Texas Longhorns and the Rice 0W9a and despite Ihp fact tbat they were ha14 to two field goals by the ll riflery, they still haer a dangerous utachuae. It is mII known that the Aggie. al- W'aTs have It good tlefetlsivo team. t'oaeh ;`etnnidi of the Frog, bad his men throwing the loather bark and forth for a long time Tuosdny afteru"ou. ;;rural limes in the S. D1. U. game .llouday night the Frogs lost ixissessiou of the ball under their oWa basket when their basses went a+vey. "chundt is not merlookiug the impor• rant matter of free tbrows. bowevrr• His team raid much better against the Ponies. making l:i out of tali chances, a Metter pprcentage (ban they made against .Arkansas. The Frogs and Bears met in Waco almost exactly a rrur ego, Fuh. 11, 111;30, and the Frogs tiuk a JI•.'l boating. This year. bon ever, the Purple tram is fuerd with the necrs- Sits of defealiug the Bear; to remain ill the eonfereuca race at all. In Turnday niglit's gaine at College Ntatioo tho hears were alwocFt bolp- lpss against the -riff Aggie guarding. Kiersky. a subsliuile forward, msde their only tuvi field gnuls. although they made' eight free tries and mirerrl 12. lplhnan, ri gwird. srorod eight points for the Parmcrs for high hoa- r. rs, The hnT score: '11A YLO t:- rg. rt. 11n :V IY,.rJ. f . 0 % 3 fi eon et f. 0 0 0 C'errc. 0 1 '1 Klers•k. r.f. 1 str!vktand, c" 0 wen. 9. 0 1 1 Wit,-her, F• o 0 0 nannPIS, g 0 0 n wilKan, g. 0 0 n Harris, 6. 0 0 Totals ~ a to AGGIEi _ Fa. Ft. Tp. sett, r..................... a Marcum. f 0 3 ,2 3food:'1 f 1 0 Hoke. c. 3 7 7 Veltman, a. 3 'a I, ea rd, g. 3 0 A Docne, a . 0 0 0 Totals ...................1" i 31 BRUIN TEAM ~ B Signal Intramural RoelzGl+h~il ('haml)c HELD TO TWO Company B, Signal Corps won the lass A basketball championship Sun- FIELD day afternoon by defeating Battery GOALS B, Artillery by the decisive scare of 16.8 in one of the hardest fought and !best played games of the intramural Mighty Alford Is Stopped Cold by Lester Veltman as Cadets Win by 31 to 12 Score. By Associated Press. College Station, Feb. 4-Holding the Baylor University Bears to 2 field goals and showing a much im- proved offensive form, the Texas Aggie cagers trounced the Bruin quintet, 31 to 12, to spoil Baylor's chances at the Southwest Confer- ence title. With the mighty Alford com- pletely baffled by the clever guard- ing and floor work of Lester Velt- man, A. and 11• guard, and Capt. Shiro Hoke, center, holding Strick- land, Bear scoring ace,. without a field goal, the Aggies piled up a 113-to-6 lead at the half. They con- tinued a close man-for-man de- fense in the second period to run up a lopsided score. Charlie Beard, guard, starred with Hoke and Veltman. Veltman took scoring honors with 8 points, followed by Hoke with 7. Bob Kiersky, substitute forward, scored both Baylor field goals and one free throw to lead the Bruins with b points. The game was fast and bitterly fought from the dart, but the powerful Aggies forced the Bruins to take shots front difficult angles and distances. Wells, Bay- lor guard, and Beard were banished on personal fouls. The box score: Baylor- rG FT TP Alford. f. 0 3 3 Kroney. f . 0 0 0 Pierce, f. 0 1 1 Kiereky. f. " 1 0 Strickland, c . fl 2 g-rns. g . 0 1 1 t5'itcn er, 6'. 0 0 0 Runt' els, g . 0 0 0 Wilson . 0 tl 0 Harris. g. 0 0 0 Totals . ' 8 12 Aggles-- FG FT TP Rell, f. " • 6 Nfarn,nm, f. 0 2 2 . 1 6 2 Hal+• _ 3 1 g 3 8 r.ar. c. 3 0 6 . 0 0 0 Totals ..................1: 7 31 b TEXAS A & M ' \VFST SUN-, . VERSUS . RAMP E UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBE R 26. 1931 SeC. 108 2,30 P. M. KYLE FIELD STADIUM Row 3 4 ADMIT ONE-PRICE $3.00 The m.angement 731uste no responsibility for accident or Iote to fey ppectular. p~ i J INOCASN NEf DNOWI L L BE MADE ON THIS TICKET. BUS. MAAAGEa E a A. i_'M. Seniors Honored ' at Luncheon by P u b 1 isher Company H, Infantry was declared' C ph class B champion after smothering T " his Company A, Signal Corps, 23-6. is the second year that two classes ' of basketball have been sponsored by r the intramural department, and since V " such unusual amount of interest , y I has been shown the practice will be continued next year, an Si I th se i-fin C m B - l r y g p , n e m a s, o Cal Corps defeated Battery D. Artil- ' lery and Battery B downed C Engi- a veers in the class A competition; Com-<t N,; s~ sfEa pony H, Infantry defeated C Cavalry and A, Signal Corps eliminated Com- pany A, Infantry. An unusual but interesting factor presents itself at this stage in that both A and B Signal Corps units were Staff Photo by Dennis Hayes. represented in the finals for the bas- ketball championship. These organiza- Approximately sixty studen ts and Lltcir instructors from the achonl of electrical engineering of A. & 3f. College are shown in the above tions, heretofore practically inert with hotel Wednesda noon b E J picture at a luncheon given in their honor in the Danish rooma,ttheAdolphus Kie t bli h f Th Ti y . y . !respect to intramural sports, haveday morning the group visited , pu s s er o e mes Herald and a regent of the school. Wcdnes- the Ford plant and inspected the new plant of The Tinres Herald at 1 o'clock, made remarkable progress during the The group has been in Dallas since Monday morning. current intramural season thus far, and bid fair to give plenty of trouble in the race for the intramural stan-; The members of the class A cham- pionship team will receive sterling sil- i pionship ver medals from the intramural dl - partment, and it is customary for the organization which is represented to give sweaters. The class B champions will receive bronze medals. This is the first year that medals have been given to class B teams by the department, and it is hoped that by giving these, more interest will be shown in class B competition. Probably the feature of the class A championship game was the long distance goal shooting of C. B. Floyd, B Signal Corps forward. Floyd scor- ed 8 of his team's 16 'points, six of which were made from near the cen- ter of the floor. The other two were the result of foul shots. L. P. Morgan, also of the Signal Corps played an excellent game, while A. C. Doche starred for the losers. In the class B championship tilt, H. M. Starcke was the main cog in the Company H scoring machine, be- ing credited with 14 of the 23 points scored by his team. R. E. Barfield, also of Company H, and B. F. Carter of the Signal Carps were the other outstanding men. With the playing of these games the 1930 intramural basketball season was brought to a close. Campus Quiet After Tidal Wave of Femininity For E. E. and "T" Dances By Tony Ketterson nex respectively. "}sill" Curnelson's or- The tumult and the shouting dies; chestra from Schulenburg played for The sweethearts and other gals de- the athletes' affair while Ligon part: Smith's Baker hotel orchestra from Still walks to class the K-det corps, Dallas furnished the inspiration for With humble and a contrite heart. the E. E. dancers. The latter orchestra (Apologies to Kipling.) also played for the corps dance Sat- (By grapevine telegraph) -Reports urday night. were still coming in late Wednesday The E. E. decorative motif featured of the wreckage caused by the tidal a lighthouse in the center of the floor,) wave of femininity that swept over whose beams alternately swathed the the Texas A & M College campus dancers in floods of red, green and Friday and Saturday as a result of the yellow light; a miniature broadcast- social disturbances brought about by ing tower on the orchestra platform; the "T" Club and E. E. dances. and subdued colored lights against a Rescue workers were reported to be dark blue background of modernistic. having an extremely difficult task design. The "T" Club used an array checking up on the wreckage because of "T" blankets, pennants, and Span- most of the damage was done beneath ish moss to complete their decorations. the surface of the cadet corps' mas- "0 I think A and M is just won- culine exterior. Veteran relief work- derful," cooed a soft creature in a ers have been quoted as saying the dazzling white sick evening gown as total amount of damage caused by the the crowd jammed the exits after the flood might not accurately be deter- corps dance. ears t veral ome d fo i "Yes, so wonderful," retorted her . y ne r se o c m escort as he attempted to dive over The "'1"' Club and E. E. dances the mob in front of the cloakroom were held Friday night at the Bryan window. "So keen! Inspection tomor- Country club and in the mess hall an- row at eight-thirty." V THE DAILY TIMES HERALD Dallas' Greatest Newspaper DALLAS, TEXAS, MONDAY, MARCH 9,1931 A. & M. G90ITS INVADE DALLAS TD SEE PLANTS 59 SENIORS TO INSPECT ELEC- TRICAL CENTERS FOR THREE DAYS CLUB G I V E S LUNCHEON' Power and Utility Chiefs Give' can't get from books," fifty-nine panies whose plants and equipment they will Inspect. go- po 1400V Students Lectures Nearly sixty seniors of the electrical engineering school of Texas A. R M. college touring the electri- on Industry cal and industrial fields of Dallas were halted in their busy curiosity Monday morning to pose for the photog- rapher in front of the General Electric general office building. The electrical cadets pronounced them- Visiting Dallas to "see thinlrs we selves having a "wonderful time" with "a lot to see." They wil be here three days as guests of various com- Y I1y 40 S) APi ~S c - a 0 V O Q ~o Ad`' A BANq U~ 7- COMpgNY 6oN/,y~NOE~s 'SECON4 4/vo -/N- ~OMMq~O MESS FALL $AHOUET Roo m n 0 r A ~5 T H 1q34 a r'g 3 ~PQ M.1~f~ 5 9 seniors of the elecuical eng ne img r school of Texas A. & M. college fo- 'general manager, and B. D. Hull, cused their uniaded student vision upon "what makes the wheels go chief engineer; the Murray com- 'round" in the large electrical plants pony plant on Williams street, THE DALLAS JOURNAL of the city. where they were to be guests of C. Every branch of the electrical in- dustry was to be visited during Nevitt; the Western Union com- 1Q 1 their three-day stay, which will be pony at Main and Pearl streets, as with a visit to d Thursda l d guests of V. C. Carr, engineer. y conc u e l f th t The second entertainment fea- an o e the Trinidad power p Texas Power and Light company, tare of the program was the the- arty y lanned b the Gra bar TEXAS WEDNESDAY DALLAS MARCH 11, 1931 as guests of the aompanv officials. p p y y and Westin house Electric com- Athens; H. A. Eddins, Marquez; C. , > - " Dressed in their smart khaki uni- ' loaded with knowled e," g forms g pares for Monday evening, W. Evans, Corsicana; A. G. Fors- ter, Dallas; E. C. Hal-per, Brenham; - , but eager for a few "facts;" the ca- ro- f three hi d Tuesday's Ytinerary, H. Holden, Jr., Franklin; T. S. Job-' son, San Marcos; P E Jacobs Gal- Students at A ineerin l En t El & M. Inspect WFAA Transmitter ers p o p bets under lea M. C. Hughes, N. F. Rode lessors Tuesday morning's itinerary will . . , veston; C. D. Kauffman For ( . g g ec rica , Dillingham, invaded Dal- and H C include breakfast at the Dallas Worth; W. N. Keisling, Stanton; . . las Sunday night instead of early Athletic club as guests of the Otis Elevator company and inspections G. P, Lewie, Gainesville; R. D. Me- l C C d Ok Monday. e of the boys wanted to "s of the Southwestern Bell Telephone a man, do, la,: C. A. Me-, a Gee, Fort Worth: F. R. McIntosh, om so the decid- make dates in Dallas company, Westinghouse and Gray- Cavina; L. L. Malaise, Handley; J. , ed to catch an earlier train," one of bar Electric companies and the Wyatt. Metal and Boiler works W. Minis, Cleburne; J. D. Mitch- am Murchison; C B Moehlman the leaders said. entire electrical life of the Th , with luncheon at the Trinity Port- , . . , Bryan; K. S. Moss, Port Arthur; e city was bared at once to the gaze land Cement company plant at n H. D. Murray, Merkel; W. H. of the embryo engineers. noo The boys who made the trip are: Myers, Valley View; J. N. Nahas, Beaumont; J. K. Reynolds Pitts- After breakfast at the Adolphus J. L. Alber, Houston; V. Aldape, t f , burgh; G. R. Robertson, Temple; s o hotel, where they were gues Saltillo, Mexico; R. L. Allen, Fort General Electric company and th R. Saibara, Webster; I. Seaberg, YY p e Worth; C. T. Balderach, Galveston; the General Electric Supply cor- T. G. Banks, Jr., Oklahoma City; Dayton; J. A. Shellberg, Jr., Fort Worth; C. E. Simpson, Harlingen; pora,tion, the group descended upon J. E. Barbee, Bunkie; C. S. Basin- , C. B. Smith, Dallas; G. J. Smith the general office of the G. E. com- 'gerDallas; J. F. Blair, Handley; , Gonzales; J. B. Smith, Dallas; T. pany and the G. E. Supply corpora- F. E. Bortle, Longview; E. H. Bra- switch service shop tion warehouse O M. Sowell, Cleburne; M. H. Stewart, , , dv, klahoma City; H. K. Brown, gear factory and radio plant under Houston; R L Bullock Ta Jr - Houston; R. A. Sullivan, r., Shreve- ort L Ti H Pfl . . , y supervision of W. B. Clayton, assist- lor; J. H. Burney, Bishop; W, J. ant district manager, with full ex- Chalkle R W E p , a.; . mmerman, uger- ville; H. J. Williams, Dodge City; y, anger; . . Clower, W. L. Wilson, San Antonio; W. T. planations. Dallas; G. A. Cushman, San An- The next visit was paid to the tonio; E. M. Carl, Jr., San Antonio; Wingo, Sulphur Springs; H. M. w Wingren, Denison, and H. P. Wool- Dallas Power and Light company R. C. Daniel, Cleburne; J. R. Dean, ley, Houston, plant at the foot of Griffin street, where they were guests of Ross H. j Forney, assistant general manager, and J. M. Harley, power plant su- perintendent, There they watched the process of transforming electricity through its various stages of steam and 1e I mechanical power, visiting the tur- bine rooms, the boiler rooms, the switching structure, the electrical,` switchboard and the main control j a~•nnm. I ~ a t To Club Meeting. At noon, they went to the wee', meeting of the Electric club at ' Balzer hotel, where. they lunct with some of the principal elec cal figures of the city and recoil recognition on the program. Tl also listened to the address by R. B. Whitehead, chief geoloi for the Atlantic Oil compa speaking on geological relati ships of the new East Texas fields with the other fields of state. The afternoon was scheduled be devpted to visiting the vari plants of the Southwestern I Telephone company, where t were to be guests of W. L. Pre Continued on Page Three. Dallas Industries Inspected by A. & M. Cadets A & M WINS FIRST BASEBALL TITI.EI FINAL BASEBALL STANDINGS The conference baseball race fi- ; ' Wally ended up looking like this: Team G W L Pet ; ' A&M ....................lU 9 1 .900; ' Texas 10 8 `L .800 ~ Baylor 10 7 3 .i00', Rice 10 3 7 ,3001 SMU ......._10 2 8 .'100 T c u l0 1 9 .loo .,~a~r r 1 rv A~~li~ J ~~~~~G~ ~ 4. _I f..~ Picking an al]-conference team is never an easy job, and the local team I is always given the preference as to the number of p1a,~ers on the nlythica nine. However, it seems this year the the only logical choice is to place sev- en A & M men on the learn, We present our selection: j ~ First Team ~ Catchers: Koch, Baylor. Pitchers: Shaw, A & M; De ]a Fuente, Texas; Hawes, A & M; Peo~ ples, Texas. First Base; Carpenter, A & M. Second: Davis, A & b7. 'i - 1\\\ Third: Pampell, A & M. 1 ~ ~~~°xx111JJJ Short Stop: Ater, Texas. Left Field, Bell, A & M. Center Field: Veltman, A 8, M ~ ~V Right Field: Koy, Texas. P baccalaureate Sunday Convocation The Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas May 24, 1931 10:30 a. m. 1. Processional (Note) "March" from Aida Verdi 2. Ylarch (Indoors) "Grand Processional" Op. 26 Edward Schaaf 3. "Doxology" 4. Invocation Rev. J. B. Gleisner 5. Anthem "Te Deum in B :4linor" Buck A. and M, Glee Club 6. Announcements 7. Reverie= `Chant Sans Paroles" Friml A. and M. Band 8. Baccalaureate Sermon The Rev. Wallace Bassett, D.D., Pastor of Cl iff Temple Baptist Church, Dallas, Texas 9. Benediction. Rev. Jesse Thomson 10. Recessional (Note) "La Reine lle Saba Gounod NOTE: It is requeeted that the congregation rice when the baccalaureate procession enters the hall, and remain standing until after the invocation. It is also re- quested that after the benediction the congregation remain standing in place antil the recessional line teaches the rear of the hall. AND TO THINK HESS KEp-f ME CAPTIVE FoR r]LaRLY 20 CONSECUTIVE YfARS Stiff Battle Stars Bell and Hawes To Wrest First Pennant From Texas I * ~ Battalion Conference ,Nightmare Of First Innan#F' Proves Beginnin~,r Of A \Z Baseball Team (,hosen I Happy llream i Captain Beau Bell, the slugger from Bellville, and Axel Hawes, the curve , 1 " t %7 ~Hitrginbotham, Baseball Coach ball artist from Da]]as, ended their baseball careers at Aggieland in a blaze of glory when the figured prominent]•y in defeating Uncle Billy Disch's heretofore invincible Long- horns 8 to 16, to win the conference baseball crown Saturday afternoon on Kyle field. • Bell had his second perfect day at bat in as many games with a home run, a single, and two free passes. His play on the defense was flawless throughout and in the fourth round, with the score tied, two men on and ta~o out, he slammed the ball to cen- ter for four bases. In all, Bell scored three runs himself and batted in two more With two down in the first, after four unearned runs had been scored, Ab Hawes took charge of the hurling duties and had the Steers "eating" out of his hand until the ninth frame, when he weakened slightly and allow- ed three hits, which accounted for trao tallies, ~>;l After Carpenter had gone put,pitch- er to first in the second, and Davis had gone out swinging, Garvey reach- , . ed first when Baumgarten dropped his easy fly to left. Hawes, next up, with a terrific wallop tt•ippled to left cen- ` ter to bring in the first Aggie marker. ' Pampell then singled sharply to left scot•ing• Hawes. Mitchell rolled out, short to first to retire the side. The next inning found the Steer hurler again in the hole when Veltman was issued free passage to first. Bell followed with a neat single over sec- ond sending Veltman to third. Hen- derson then smacked the ball squarely into center field for a clean double scoring Veltman and Bell. The next men went out in order, Henderson be- ing held at third. Hawes fouled to the catcher to start the fout•th inning and Pampell got his second safety with a nice double to ]eft. Mitchell drew a walk and was out on an easy fly to short. Beau Bell then hit a terrific clout to the center garden, which Koy fielded poor- ly and it went under the stadium for a home run. Henderson roiled out pitcher to first and there the Aggie seoring~ ended until the seventh fi•ame. In the seventh Bell, after being walked, went to second when Hender- son was hit by a pitched ball, gained third nn a passed ball and scored on Davis' long fly to center. The sensational defensive play of Sweetie Davis, Hendy Henderson and Mitch Mitchel] compared favorably to the perfect performance of captain Beau Bell at the plate and the master- ful twirling of Axel Hawes. Davis' catch of White's drive to right field was a little short of miraculous, while Mitchell's perfect throw to second in the seventh ~s•ould have done credit i to a major leaguer. After two bobbles in the first inning, Henderson played errorless ball the remainder of the way. His very efficient handling of Ater's drive through second in the fifth inning and a great catch of Bloe- baunr's fly in the ninth far oversha- dowed his two misplays early in thei game. Although he failed to connect in fom• trips to the plate, Bob Garvey,l the Polk County productcaught a per-' feet game behind the bat and teas frequently found down the first base line eager to assist in case of a mis- ihrow. Squawk Veltman also had an off' day at the plate, but was credited with) only two official trips and two walks. George Carpenter coveted the initial sack well throughout, handling nine ~ MF gruuCfurn( n1lb 24TIerlrnmral Lalfrile of Texas CiletOzir for T>rntntenrement lvweh 0 SHIRO HOKE MAKES ALL-CONFERENCE TEAM '7 il # * 4 * M T C U CROWNED CONFERENCE BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP a - - 'T C U Lands Two Places With S M U N C • 4 0 h ~fflnvt 24, 28, 29, ant) 3D 1931 ANNUAL E. E. DANCE Exclusive ~hIA.,41~q~ ~:•J ~rF"s~ MARCH G, 1931 A. and M. College of Texas 4 t ew oast Artillery Unit Assigned And Arkansas Each Getting On • e Fnnrnmant AnA Rno,n .8 r LA I -.IL w~ 11--_" aL uaiveswn, will involve the use of many new instruments that have been developed since the last war. The disciplinary control of the bat- teries, until Seniors can be from ° withki their own batteries, will be composed of five seniors and five i juniors from the six field Artillery ter of the Aggie cage team who has already been given all-Southwest rec- ognition on the teams selected by Lloyd Gregody of the Houston Post- Disnatch, Dusty Bogges, conference of- ficial, of the Galveston News, Curtis A~ inson, publicity director at A & M, and The Battalion. SELECTION GIVES STRONGEST SWC TEAM EVER ASSEMBLED Dietzel, TCU Forward Sumner, TCU Forward Hoke, A&M Center Skeeters, SMU Guard Sexton, Ark Forward This year, the Southwest conference had the strongest collection of basket- ball teams ever assembled at one time in the history of the conference, and it stands to reason that the all-con- ference selection would be a team that could meet any team in the nation. We believe that in our selection, we have a team that is the strongest com- bination possible from the large num- ber of stars in the conference this sea- son. We place, Dietzel at forward be- cause a team would not be complete vithout his high scoring ability, he has been a determining factor in the Frogs winning the pennant. Sumner is the outstanding forward of the conference. His clever floor ,vork, good shooting and defensive play has been a predominating force with TCU, Hoke is in our estimation the lead- ing center of the conference. He has not been outjumped this season and has been the most valuable man on the Aggie squad. His floor play, shooting and defensive work has been outstand- ng in every game this season. Skeeters of the Ponies is the most valuable guard in the conference this year and no team would be complete without him. Sexton of Arkansas and Veltman of A & M, both are outstanding candi- dates for the other guard position as loth are very valuable men. Sexton has scored many points for the Hogs, n addition to being outstanding in floor play and defensive work. batteries. These men will continue in COMPANY i~ 1 34 their field artillery work however, and will be in charge of the battery only for formations and while in barracks. Army instruction in this work will be under the direction of two army officers and an enlisted detachment which will arrive here during the sum- mer. The establishment of this unit comes following the war department's ~ increasing its defense along the gulf coast and the likewise need for re serve officers in this unit. Student requirements for signing i h up n t e coast artillery at the be- i AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for Summer Session Subject Grade First Term Second Term Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Statien, Texas. Registrar. `o d a c a E a ro t x 0 N e d a H AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for Second Term Session 1 928.29 - ` :.l.~..1~~ . Class: Sophomore Course: Elec. Engineering SUBJECT Grade Civil Engineering 206 Drawing 202 Electrical Engineering 202 .V English 204 Mathematics 204 Mechanical Engineering Military Science Physics 208 Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas. Registrar AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for First Term Session 1930-31 Senior Electrical Engineering SUBJECT Grade Electrical Engineering 401 C Electrical Engineering 403 - Electrical Engineering 405 C Electrical Enginereing 431 English 401 _ Mechanical Engineering 403 C• Military Science Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas. Registrar. t AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for First Term Session 1928.29 ::..,X~~ ~:.,....~I 1.~ Class: Sophomore Course: Elec. Engineering SUBJECT Grade Drawing 201 sL Electrical Engineering 201 English 203 Mathematics 203 I ~ Mechanical Engineering :2 I G Military Science OS~ i Physics 207 $ Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas. Registrar Session 1929.30 AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS ........_-`f.:.... ^ : . 1 has completed the work of the ..........................(i. ---_..........Course through the ............:........:.........................year, with the following exceptions: Entrance Conditions: College Work Deficiencies ....................!2 .............................term hours .............................term hours Advanced Credits C) Classification, 1929-30 l To THE STUDENT: Preserve this card as it must be pre- sented at the opening of the session. Duplicate cards issued only upon payment of fifty cents. Errors must be reported to the Registrar promptly. CHARLES E. FRILEY, Registrar. Collerr Station. 'T'exas. AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for Second Term Session 1927.28 Class: Freshman Course: Engineering SUBJECT Grade Chemistry 102 C Drawing 104 Drawing 108 English 106 Mathematics 102 Mathematics 104 Mechanical Engineering 1 03 S Military Science I O6 iL Physical Training ~'_(t1 { I Q C/ Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, 'Texas. Registrar 0 d F M al 0 06 a O a 0 0 C6 a+ a m F AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL 1. o• 44 q L4 b A N d a! b 7 O A 1 0 d F COLLEGE OF TEXAS j Report for Second Term Session 1929.30 I i Close: Junior Course: Electrical Engineering i3J1;CT Grade Civil Engineering 305 Civil Engineering 315 Electrical Engineering 302 History 305 Mechanical Engineering 318 Military Science Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas Registrar. AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for First Term Session 1927-28 a ..........v Class: Freshman Course: Engineering SUBJECT Grade Chemistry 101 Drawing 101 - - Drawing 103 English 106 ~J Mathematics 101 r Mathematics 103 Mechanical Engineering D.{ . Military Science lp Physical Training Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent- B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas. Registrar AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF TEXAS Report for First Term Session 1929.30 Junior Electrical Engineering SUBJECT Grade Electrical Engineering 301 Economics 403 Mathematics 305 Mechanical Engineering 317 Mechanical Engineering 323 ' Military Science Remarks: Grading System: A, Excellent; B, Good; C, Fair; D, Condition; E, Failure. The passing grade is C. CHARLES E. FRILEY, College Station, Texas Registrar.