An Eleventh Commandment: Don’t Get Caught! Published Weekly by the Students of the Aarri cultural and Mechanical College of Texas VOL. XXVII BRYAN, TEXAS, NOVEMBER 28, 1928. NO. 11 IN MEMORIAM A. H. Holton, a freshman of H Company, died in the hos pital early last Saturday morning, after a short but severe seige of pneumonia. A military escort from his company was sent with the body for the burial ceremony Sunday morning. The Battalion extends its sincerest sympathies to the par ents and relatives of Holton, and to his close friends and ac quaintances of the campus. Jjfi. y'i- -‘f:vJ 1929 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE MADE Aggies to Play Tulane and Kansas Aggies Next Season. Before the budding conference winning Texas Aggie football team of next year swings down the long lane that ends in a possible South west Conference pennant it will have undergone a tempering and a testing process calculated to try the mettle of the best of teams, the 1929 Farmer schedule recently re leased by “Sully” shows. On October 5 the Aggies will journey to New Orleans to attempt to take the Green of Tulane into camp. The following week the Kan sas Aggies replace the Sewanee Tig ers as the Farmer opponents on the Dallas Fair football card. The ca dets then move over to Fort Worth to see if T. C. U. will hop when the Farmers yell “Frog.” The 1929 schedule as it now stands is as follows: September 20, Trinity at Waxahachie; September 28, South western at College Station; October 5, Tulane at New Orleans; October 12, Kansas Aggies at Dallas; Octo ber 19, T. C. U. at Fort Worth; October 26, Arkansas at College Sta tion; November 2, Sam Houston State Teachers College at College Station; November 9, S. M. U. at College Station; November 16, Rice Insti tute at Houston; November 28, Tex as University at College Station. Contract with Tulane calls for games in 1930 and 1932 that will probably be played on the State Fair date. DEBATING TEAM REORGAN IZING FOR COMING SEASON Did you know that A. and M., be sides having men who could carry a football across a goal line, also has a few who can stand on both feet to discuss and argue a question sensibly? For the past thirty years, at different intervals, these men have been organized into debating teams, but not being able to take a lively part in the general trend of activities, at this institution, have failed to attract any attention. How ever, for the past two years the debating team has been steadily (Continued on Page 7) THE BATTALION A MEMBER OF N. C. P. \. At the annual meeting of the National College Press Association, which was recently held at Purdue University, The Battalion became a full member of the Association. Mem bership is restricted to college news papers. E. L. Andrews, editor of The Battalion, represented A. and M. at the meeting. He traveled the longest distance to be present at the meet ing, and thus gave A. and M. and The Battalion very much publicity. Many very important subjects were discussed at the convention, and the delegates received much valuable in formation. Colleges from some twen ty-six states had delegates present when the roll was called. Officers elected for the ensuing year were: W. C. Pettit, a senior and represent ing the University of Pittsburg, as president; and G. F. Taubeneck, a junior and representing the Univer sity of Illinois, as vice-president. A committee was elected to choose the place for the 1929 convention, and it seemed certain that the University of Illinois would be chosen. “BEGGARS OPERA” TO BE GIVEN DECEMBER 6 John Gay wrote a play in 1728 in which he said there was not an honest man or woman, but the characters were all human. This is the two hundredth anniversary of this opera. The company which will ap pear at the Assembly Hall on De cember 6 is the original cast, with one exception, that had a run of four years at the Lyric Theatre in London. It is said that every signer of the Declaration of Independence saw this show the first time it visited Amer- (Continued on Page 7) SIGNAL CORPS TO GET BATTALION FLAG As the result of gift by the South west Telephone Company, of Bryan, of check for $116.00 the Signal Corps of the A. and M. College of Texas cadet corps is to have a new set of battalion colors, Lieutenant A. E| Michelsen, officer in charge of the Signal Corps, announced Thursday. The check to purchase the new col ors, which will be of silk, was pre sented by the telephone company through its local manager, B. H. Noel, to Cadet Major C. S. Robert son, of Denton, ranking cadet officer of the Signal Corps Battalion. Pre sentation of the check was authoriz ed by E. P. Seamen, district man ager of the telephone company, whose headquarters are at Georgetown. The gift was made, it was explained, through interest of the company in the college -and its work. TICKETS GO ON SALE FOR THE WHITE LECTURE General admission tickets for the William Allen White lecture, to be given at the Assembly Hall on Wednesday evening, December 5, are now on sale. The plan of selling tickets used last year for the Dur ant and . Browne lectures is to be employed. General admission tick ets may be purchased from someone in each office or classroom building, or, in the corps, from each company commander. These may be exchanged for reserve seats at no additional charges at the Y. M. C. A. or at the Canady and Burtis Drug Store, Bryan. The first exchange date is Monday, December 3. Only those holding general admission tickets may secure the reserved seat ticket on this date. Thus, those buying early are assured of first choice seats for the sale is open to the general pub lic on December 4. CORPS WILL GO TO STATE GAME Entire Cadet Corps Will Entrain For Austin. It won’t be long now. From all indications . Old Aggieland will be rather deserted after those special trains pull out Thursday morning. The first train is scheduled to leave at 6:15, the other three following at ten minute intervals. They will ar rive in Austin at 9:45—9:55—10:05 —10:15 respectively. The parade will start at 10:30, the Corps marching up Congress Avenue to the Capitol Building where it will be dismissed. The band will be stationed in front of the Chamber of Commerce build ing, and the reviewing stand will be in front of the Stephen F. Austin Hotel. Baggage will be checked at the Chamber of Commerce Building free of charge, and it is requested that no tips be given. For those students who are re turning Thursday night the fare will be the small sum of three dollars and ten cents. Those who contem plate remaining over until Sunday night should buy a ticket costing $4.50. This ticket will be good on any train leaving Austin not later than midnight Sunday. Three spec- (Continued on Page 2) NOTICE! All students who have not already purchased their 50c tickets for the Thanksgiving football dances, please see your top-kicks tonight and do so. Even though you are not com ing back for the dances, the football players are. And they have the right to expect some real good dances from the corps. The money has been coming in very slowly, and the committees will be powerless to throw some real dances for the football players if the corps does not buy these 50c tickets. All the top-kicks will be around again tonight, and everyone please do your part.