Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1921)
Che Daily Bulletin Vol. V College Station, Texas, Friday, November 18, 1921. No. 47 SECOND GENERAL CONFERENCE HELD Officials Who Atttended Association of Land Gran: Colleges Meeting Discuss Work of Organization. The second general conference of the College was held in the Y. M. C. A. chapel yesterday morning from 9 until 10 o’clock. It was given over to discussions by representatives of the Association of Land Grant Col- leges held in New Orleans last week. These discussions were of thoughts and suggestions made at the confer- ence. Dean E. J. Kyle told of the section- al meeting of the deans of agricul- ture in which was considered the problems of resident teaching. Dr. B. Youngblood discussed the work of the Experiment Station section, W. 8B. Lanham the agricultural extension section, Dean J. C. Nagle the engi- neering section and A. B. Conner re- lated some of the things of interest in the agronomic section. Each took up the topics or sub- jects of the most importance or that appealed to them most and pointed out the good points to the assembly. ———————— elem OFFICERS OF FRESHMAN CLASS ARE ELECTED Zim Hunt of Dallas, was elected president of the Freshman class at the annual Freshman election held Monday. M. E. Dealy of Houston was elected vice-president, F. K. Sangui- net of Fort Worth, secretary-treas- urer, and S. W. Mims of Palestine, historian. a i———————— EXPERT TYPEWRITING Let us do that typewriting work during Thanksgiving holidays. D. D. Steele R. B. Cleveland 62 Milner. At Calcutta, a couple were married recently in an airplane. The wed- d ng party ascended 6,000 feet, and the engine being shut off a clergy- man read the wedding service as the machine circled gently to the earth. 0 Ne #* REVIEW CORPS TODAY; He TO BE HELD TWICE A »* MONTH IN THE FUTURE 0 Ye Ye Ye Ye Ye Ye Ye Ye Ve Ye Ye ak He fe He Ae Ae He fe ue Ne HE Ne Me Me Ne He A review of the cadet corps # will be held on the drill ground # this afternoon at 5:15; and in % the future reviews will be held *% semi-monthly at this same % % hour on the first and third Fri- % day of the month, instead of * on Saturday morning of each #* week as has been done in the past. ue Major Dougherty has made * this new arrangement in order’ %* to accommodate College and #* Bryan people and others who * desire to witness ‘it, and who * have been able to do so in the past only by great inconveni- #% ence because of the early hour at which it was held. - All branches will be dis- mounted in the review today and will wear the No. 3 uni- form. PE He we He He He He ov, \J \7 \/ PE ut ne E Corps to be Stylish in New Uniforms Thanksgiving Day 0 Yo Fe Fe Ye oF. Yo oY. ge ode de Sle ge fe fe fe fe fe The new dress uniforms adopted as a distinctive style for the cadet corps of the College have been received and are being issued this week by the Exchange Store, so that all the cadets may be dressed with “class” Thanks- giving. At the opening of school all cadets are issued the khaki trousers, wool and khaki shirts, campaign hats shoes and accessories according to «ize from the regular stock carried by the Exchange Store, and are then measured for the dress uniform. They wear the khaki trousers, wool shirt and campaign hat every day and the dress uniform at reviews, parades, while off duty and on oth- er special occasions when appearanc: is particularly important. The dress uniform is usually re- ceived in time for the annual Waeo trip, but because of the additional (Continued on Page 4) TEAMINFINAL LAP OF TRAINING Bible Has Retired With Team Be- hind Closed Gates to Prepare for Thanksgiving Contest. D. X. Bible, head coach of athletics at the College, has retired with his Aggie football machine behind closed gates to fit them for the champion- ship clash with the University Long- ‘horns here on Thanksgiving Day. Thus no one sees anything of the Farmer’s- camp this week and they hear nothing outside the gates. They depend entirely upon rumors that the Aggie coach is preparing his aggre- gation of youngsters for an offensive caleulated to baffle the powerful squad of veteran Longhorns who took vie- tory from the Aggies last Thanksgiv- ing at Austin when the Farmer ma- chine boasted of a Mahan, a Higgin- botham, a Drake and a Pierce, hailed throughout the South as of the great- est calibre ever produced. With these men gone or sitting in the grandstands as spectators and in their places men with reputations ex- tending only the length of the pres- ent season, Bible will face the same opposition that snatched victory from him last year, they having had an ad- ditional year of experience. This game is generally recognized to reflect with the heaviest odds against Texas A. and M. and were it not that close followers of the maroon and white give great credit to the force of the “Aggie spirit” they too would have misgivings regarding the approaching contest. Having won from State University at College Station in 1919 and then dropped the game to the Longhorns in Austin in 1920, the Aggies elected to lay claim to the 1921 game at Col- lege Station, That was their declara- ration immediately following the Austin game last year. Then and there they willed to win in 121 and without contracting the germ of con- fidence that will has persisted throughout this season. Placing their support behind a team with only a nucleus of “T” men and filled out with youngsters of unknown has followed the impending ability the corps team up to this great