THE BATTALION 7 PROMOTION LIST FOR SESSION 23-24. (Continued From Page Six Rank Name Assignment Rank Name Assignment Staff Sgt Sergeant .. .. Staff Sgt Sergeant .. .. Wood. C. R.. . . Bickel, A Corporal Sergeant .... Corporal Manning, W. W Sergeant .. . . Corporal Sergeant .. . . Corporal Pierce, F. C.. . . Sergeant .. . . Smith, W. R.. . . Corporal Sergeant Corporal Wharton, H. E. Sergeant .. . . ...Band Corporal Hunt, G. W.. . Sergeant .. . . Corporal Sergeant .. . . ...Band AIR SERVICE. Sergeant .. . . Sergeant .. . . Major . . . Commanding Squadron Sergeant .. . . Captain . . . Flight Commander Sergeant .. . . Captain . . .Flight Commander Corporal . . . . Hipp, W. S 1st Lieut. . . . ...Squadron Adjutant Corporal . . . . Walker, O. B.. . . 1st Lieut. . . . Corporal . . . . Bodine, W. R.. . 1st Lieut. . . . . . . -Herrling, F. C.. Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . Corporal . . . . Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . .... Whatley, G. A.. . Corporal . . . . 2nd Lieut. . . . .... Wallace, P. G.. 2nd Lieut. . . . By Order COLONEL TODD. 2nd Lieut. . . . . . . .Elliott, L. C 1st Sgt H. J. FITZGERALD, Adjutant. LIVELY SCRAPS ON SCHEDULE FOR 1923 (Continued from page 3) pective teams. All A. and M. Clubs in North Texas plan a get-together day at the Fair on this date. On the following Saturday the Ag gies travel to Baton Rouge and meet the Louisiana Tigers. This team is coached by Mike Donohoe, who for fourteen years turned out consistent winners at Auburn. This game, as well as the game in Dallas, will prove a real test of the Aggies’ strength and if they weather these two con tests in good shape the followers of the Maroons will have hopes of a real football team at College. On October 26, the Southern Meth odist University Team of Dallas will invade Aggieland for the first time in the history of the institution. This game will mark the opening of the Conference season for the Aggies and since they have some scores to set tle with the fast traveling Mustangs, the contest should and will prove one of much interest. On November 3 the annual game with the Baylor Bears will be played in Waco at the Cotton Palace grounds. This game has grown to such proportions that the Cotton Palace management is ex periencing difficulty in taking care of the crowds. This contest now ranks second of importance in the football calendar of the Southwest, only the annual clash of the Aggie-Longhorn game on Turkey Day overshadows it. Either the Aggies or the Bears are certain to be eliminated from the championship honors in this contest. After this contest the Aggies take a ten day rest and travel to Houston for a game with the Rice Owls on November 17. This game has always proved a stumbling block for the Ag gies and every effort will be put forth this season to wipe out the old tra dition of a “let-down” on this game. Then comes another ten day inter mission but no rest for everything in the power of the coaches will be put forth to round the Maroon team into perfect form for the greatest athletic contest in the South, the Aggie-Long horn football game on Thanksgiving Day. This game not only exceeds all others in the number of attendance, but in interest as well. No other game in the entire South drew as many peo ple last season as did the Aggie- Longhorn game and the same will be true on Thanksgiving Day this sea son. Old grads of both institutions from two score years back to those graduating this June, will be on hand to cheer their teams to victory. In addition to those the flower of Texas society will be present at this con test and there is still another element that goes to swell the mammoth throng that will journey to College Station, the little village on the banks of the Brazos, and that is the sport loving public who come to see a hard fought contest played in a sports manlike manner by real sportsmen. This element, as well as all others, has learned by past experience that re gardless of the “dope” or the record of either team that they will be as sured of a contest worth traveling many miles to witness and they have not been disappointed for the past eight years and are not likely to be this year. JOHNNIE PIERCE TO ASSIST BIBLE WITH AGGIE LINE (Continued from page 3) help out in football though and of course will have baseball in the spring. Last season House learned Bible’s system and it is expected that he will be of great help in coaching the grid iron men this season. Johnnie will handle Freshman bas ketball. Anderson, who has had Fish basketball heretofore, will go to work with his track men immediately after the close of the football season. Anderson is Freshman football coach. He will have no duties after Thanks giving except the getting in condition of his track men. “I am thrilled over the prospects of being back at A. and M. in the ca pacity of assistant coach,” Johnnie wrote to Chairman Ike Ashbum of the Athletic Council immediately after he had signed the dotted line. “Ever since my graduation I have wanted to engage in athletic work and this opportunity to come to A. and M. under D. X. Bible is the realization of one of my fondest dreams.” Johnnie, it will be remembered, sus tained a broken leg on the kick off at the Texas game in Austin in 1921. It always was felt that his loss was res ponsible for the loss of the game. He had directed the defense and was an exceptionally keen man at diagnosing plays. A forward pass defeated A. and M. and breaking up passes was Johnnie’s forte. Pierce played at end, quarter, and later center. He also made his letter in basket ball. Pierce was from Denton. He work ed his way through school was captain of his company in his graduating year and in spite of being out for basket ball , and football made exceptionally good grades. He will arrive at the College Sep tember 1. 0. W. WILLIAMS IS NEW HEAD OF A. H. DEPARTMENT Two New Instructors Added and Changes Made Within Department to Balance Promotion. D. W. Williams, for the past four years a professor in the Department of Animal Husbandry of the A. and M. College of Texas, in charge of swine, has been made head of the de partment succeeding G. S. Templeton, who resigned at the close of the spring term. With the responsibility of the work in breeding, feeding and exhibiting of swine Professor Williams has estab lished an enviable reputation among swine producers of the state. His ex hibit has always placed high in the lists of winners at the state fairs and the past year he practically cleaned the slate of prizes at the Southwest ern Exposition and Fat Stock Show, making the most glorious record in the history of livestock exhibitions by the A. and M. College. As a judge of swine and other kinds of livestock his service has been sought by the management of fairs through out this and other states. He has ac commodated whenever possible and his work has given him a very famil iar standing with the producers in the state. Professor Wlilfianis was reared in Ohio and received the greater part of his schooling in that state. He fin ished the Cleveland High School and then took his bachelor of science de gree from the University of Ohio. He took advantage of a scholarship to attend the University of Illinois and received the master of science degree from that institution in 1916. He spent two years on a farm after grad uation and then joined the Bureau of Animal Industry of the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture as extension an imal husbandman. During most of his time with the bureau he was sta tioned in South Carolina. He left the bureau and came to the A. and M. College of Texas in 1919. While employed as professor of an imal husbandry here, Mr. Williams has also found time to conduct a number of experiments with swine along with his teaching work. In this work he has cooperated with the Ex periment Station of the College. He has also conducted two soft pork ex periments jointly with the Experiment Station and the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Two additional instructors will be in the Department of Animal Hus bandry the coming year and there will also be some changes within the de partment to balance the promotion of Professor Williams. Besides his du ties as administrative head of the de partment Professor Williams will have charge of the work in cattle, in cluding instructing, breeding, feed ing, and exhibiting. Professor W. L. Stangel for the past ' few years in charge of horses, will take up the work with swine in place of Professor Williams and D. S. Buchanan, asso ciate professor, formerly instructor of federal students in the department, will take up the work formerly done by Professor Stangel. Professor Reg- enbrecht will continue with sheep. The two new men employed are A. H. Groth and Howard T. Willson. Mr. Groth will rank as an instructor in beef cattle and Mr. Wilson as as sistant professor, working with dif ferent kinds of livestock. Mr. Groth holds the B. S. degree from Ames and M. S. degree from the Colorado Agri cultural College. He will come here from the Colorado Agricultural Col lege where he has been serving as an instructor recently. Mr. W!ilson holds the B. S. degree from the University of Illinois and the M. S. degree from the University of Wisconsin. He will come here from the latter place where he has been for the past two years as a teacher. INTERURBAN RESCUED FROM THE JUNK PILE You Old Timers remember when you had to swing off of the motor operated dinkey on the Bryan-Col- lege interurban and put her back on the track or else help push her up the hill. Then came the electric cars. This spring the electric sys tem curled up and died and jitneys were resorted to. Bryan and College citizens came to the rescue, pulled the system out of the junk heap and have reorganized it. Todd A. White a two-year E. E. man of Temple, will put it back on its feet. The line will be in operation September 1, giving greatly improved service. Three cars will be operated on the line and fifteen minute service will prevail during the rush hours. White, who completed his two-year course in ’23, is a mature man hav ing served in street railway work for some years. A. B. Morris (Bugs) sensational short stop on the 1923 Aggie baseball team and captain of that team, is still setting the woods on fire with the Ardmore team of the Western Asso ciation. Bugs is playing a jam-up fielding game and is burning the league up with his hitting.