LIBRARY I A ^ COLLEGE 6F TEXAS Loiiffiioirns, Agsies Tan HP® j 1 11 tie ■m i ■ - : r : ; -i ^ c, '•; $WfW ;-i-' fife's:^ / mi X. Aggie Leader Aggie Co-Captains Ready for Battle Coach Paul “Bear’ Bryant, A&M head coach, smiles with Halfback John Crow and tackle Charlie look like to the Texas Longhorns tomorrow, anticipation as his “boys” go through contact workouts.. Krueger, Aggie co-captains, demonstrate The senior skippers will lead their team preparing for the Steers from the 40-acres. what 430 pounds of beef-eating man will mates into the annual classic clash. BATTALION Number 56: Volume 57 Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1957 Price Five Cents Spirit-Building Bonfire Gets Torch In Classic Ceremonies Tonight at 8 By FRED MEURER Sweat, tear,? and tons of green trees go up in smoke tonight at 8 when the Fightin’ Texas Aggies burn their 45th annual bonfire as a fitting climax to 10 days of hard )oil. As the mass of black smoke and glowing embers roll skyward from the burning inferno tonight, the Spirit of Aggieland, fired to an all-time high, will continue rising with it. The 12th Man faced perhaps the largest setbacks in bonfire histm’y this year. It overcame them, mak ing tonight’s blaze so much more significant. First of all, rain battered the cutting area during the past eight days, turning the woods into a soggy plain of mud, almost im possible to work in. Not satisfied with this, the goddess of ill fortune pointed a crooked finger at Aggie land again Saturday at noon when the bonfire’s center pole broke, spilling the stack of wood like gigantic pick-up sticks. The Aggies showed all their valor than by rebuilding the stack within several hours. Tonight, with their mud-caked fatigues shed in favor of spotless uniforms, cadets will look back at their victories over the weather and the bonfire’s tumble. A glow of pride will be tugging at each man’s heart, as if the “burning desire to beat the hell outta TU” wasn’t enough to make it pound within him. Injuries Few But this year’s copsti’uction also saw some good luck. A report from the college hospital last night showed only 57 men were treated for bonfire mishaps. Of these, 41 were cases of poison ivy while actual injuries were broken down into 10 sprains and bruises, three axe cuts, two ca,ses of blisters and one treatment for foreign objects in the eye. Last year’s bonfire caused 106 Aggies to visit the hospital, 73 with poison ivy. Actual injuries then numbered 27 as compared to the 16 this year. Speaking of the comparatively low number of injuries, head yell leader Ted Lowe commented: “If you consider the conditions, it’s a wonderful record.” Armon Hewitt, Corps supply of ficer who headed the safety pi’o- gram, ( said the injury list was “definitely an improvement over last year. Every bit of safety suc cess was due to the orientation pro gram conducted the week before the bonfire.” He added that unit k... SB! • ■ > . A L. —-xSctLuaiion toiaii Empty Today, Full Tomorrow Empty and drab, the 4,200 seats of Kyle Texas University tomorrow, at 2 p. m. When Field alone bear witness to the Southwest the whistle blows on the opening kick-off, Conference Champion Texas Aggies as they however, the seats will be invisible beneath go through final workouts before meeting a sellout Thanksgiving crowd. supply sergeants, who served as safety offices, did “an excellent job.” Symbol Burns at 8 The program tonight will be touched off when the band plays the “War Hymn” at 8. After this, the yell leaders will dash to the stack and toiss their torches into the oil- and fuel-soaked ,stack. Lowe estimated a total of 500 gallons of contaminated J-P-4 jet fuel, do nated by Bryan Air Force Base, and waste diesel fuel wall be used to saturate the wood tomorrow afternoon. Following the igniting of the blaze, an inspired Aggie yell prac tice will be held on the drill field. Pinky Downs, the official greeter of A&M, will give his usual spirit building spiel between yells. Lowe will recite the famous “Last Corps Trip” over a loud speaker, with music from the band providing the background. After 41,611 To Witness Turkey Day Clash Athletic Department’s ticket of fice reports 41,611 paid spectators will view Thursday’s clash between A&M and the University of Texas. The game is a complete sell-out and some 2,400 persons will be seat ed in special seats around the field. Thousands of fans unable to get tickets for the game will be able to watch the clash on a coast-to- coast television hook-up. Weather Today College Station forecast: increas ing cloudiness and warmer today; widely scattered thundershowers tonight; clearing and cooler to morrow, with northerly winds over Kyle Field. Maximum temperature yester day was 70 degrees at 2:30 p. m. This morning at 4:30 the mercury dipped to a low of 51 degrees. Relative humidity at 8 a. m. was 89 per cent and the temperature, 56 degrees. several more yells and the singing of the “Spirit,” onlookers will go their ways, leaving the bonfire burning on the drill field as a warning to teasips as to what they’re up against. The 1957 vei’sion of the bonfire towers 66 feet into the sky. Lowe said he didn’t have an accurate volume measurement on the stack, but added: “It looks to me as if it’s bigger than last year, but that’s an estimated guess.” “I know it’s bigger as far as ef fort goes,” he remarked. The history of the A&M bonfire is a story in itself. The fipst one was built on the campus in 1912. According to Pinky Downs, how ever, it was just a normal bonfire, with old crates and brush. (Pro bably similiar to the one the tea- sips burned in Austin last night.) Atom Buster On Display Visitors to the campus this af ternoon, as well as students and College Station residents, have the opportunity to see the only non mil ilary nuclear reactor in the state in operation. A&M’s atomic reactor will be on display to the public until 6:30 to night in the fifth wing of the me chanical engineering shop. As a demonstration of the reactor, dimes, will be made slightly radio active for visitors. The reactor is operated with such control that the heat it would generate at its present experiment al level in a hundred years would not equal that used by an average American home in one night. Yet if its full power was unleashed, the energy would be incompre hensible. The reactor was set up here on Sept. 1 by the Atomic Energy Com mission for experimental and re search training. Its reactions dif fer from an atomic bomb only in that they are carefully controlled. Colorful (dash Tomorrow At J By GARY ROLLINS Battalion Sports Editor Maroon and Orange will clash tomorrow on the Kyle Field green in what will be the most colorful game of the season—the traditional clash of the Texas Aggies and the University of Texas Longhorns. On a black Saturday just two short weeks ago, the Ca dets saw the mighty blue and gray of Rice as they dropped the first game in their last eighteen by a 7-G score. The only blemish on their record was a bloody-red smear placed on the Aggies by the Houston Cougar’s 14-14 tie in 1956. The Longhorns, in their last outing, smeared TCU’s indigo in Memorial Stadium by a 14-2 margin. They also possess the captured colors of Arkansas’ Cardinal Red; the red-faced Rice Owls’ Blue and Southern Methodist’s Deep Red and Royal Blue—not to mention a swatch of cloth from Baylor’s Kelly Green. Thirteen Aggie seniors will don the Maroon and White for the last time tomorrow, with the royal purple of the conference championship robe being offered the victor. Last year, the Cadets “did it up brown” by soundly thumping the Steers for the first time in their own Me morial Stadium. Of course, everyone painted the town red. However, with the Longhorns rising from the depths of the cellar—where tfiey were placed in pre-season pre dictions—the conference is wondering “where the yellow went” that symbolized TU’s expected playing prowess. These Steers are anything but “yellow.” The green years have come and gone for both A&M and Texas, but now both teams see red as they bid for Cotton White. Rice has something to say in the bartering for honors, however, for they will receive the bid to the Cotton Bowl by defeating Baylor’s Green. Lady Luck will have her chance to paint pastel pinks, for she plays the artist’s role in every Turkey Day tilt. It’s a shame television is black-and-white. The starting lineups: A&M LE Bobby Marks, No. 88 LT Charley Krueger, No. 78 LG Jim Stanley, No. 60 C John Gilbert, No. 54 RG Darrell Brown, No. 67 RT Kenneth Beck, No. 72 RE QB LH RH FB Texas Univ Maurice Doke, No. 81 J. T. Seaholm, No. 79 Don Wilson, No. 62 Louis Del Homme, No. 50 Robert E. Lee, No. 53 Garland Kennon, No. 76 Monte Lee, No. 86 Walter Fondren, No. 24 George Blanch, No. 41 Max Alvis, No. 25 Mike Dowdle, No. 33 Don Smith, No. 81 Roddy Osborne, No. 12 John David Crow, No. 44 Loyd Taylor, No. 45 Richard Gay, No. 30 m ‘if - m, j -Battalion Staff Photo Going Up! A giant crane in the background hoists logs onto the ever growing bonfire as Aggies rush to add the finishing touches, trying to make it 66 feet high when it burns to night at 8. l i c o lAAttm SENIORS WAVE *A£HI 7UlS SKiN . FOUR LONG YCAfcS Wfc Vg WAITED TWIS imt Twtu fast nms of wamst t DROUGHT TO WIN THIS GAM WtYI DRIUMD ABOUT j am spirit m am : TO TWfc AG&IE TEAM FOR PROBATION t JINX woes jmx pc AASMOHIAL FIELD TWIN NATtONAl. «A TO A OP TO THE Tlimt. TUSS& ORA^mTc VtARS j OF OeiOIRQN OLO«V ALMOST COMFLtTt OUR j FOUR YtAR STORY THfCt IS ONLY ORC YttmC LEFT TO OtSIRC j THAT WMICU IS 5Y4MU* «Z«! 8Y OUR SONFIRR - v.-- . ' ' • i'ltM.v. * —Battalion Staff Photo Drill Field Spirit One of the many outfit signs lining the border of the., drill field depicts the spirit of married Corps students. The signs show the spirit felt deep in the heart of every Aggie.