The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 30, 1932, Image 1

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    PROKT BASEMdKT
*#•
VOLUME XXXII»
CONTEST TOM
Livestock Judging Tea*
Pisces Eleventh In Inter
national Meet.
Information wa§ received by D.
W. Williams. Head of the Animal
Husbandry department, that tfcf
A and M Liveetock Judging team
placed eleventh in the thirty-aecond
annual eonteet. The International
Uveetock Judgina Content waa in-
auirurated in 1900 and Texa» A and
M hda been repreeented by a team
•eery year aince 1904 with the ex
ception of 1918. Texas A and M
won first place in the competition
fat 1918 and again in 1919. and plac
ed fifth last year.
Of the twenty teams entered,
Ohio took first place; Kansas, sec
ond; and Illinois, third. The Ohio
team previously won first place in
the American Royal Contest held
this year at Kansas City,
In the various classes of live
stock judging, Texas A and M plac
ed sixth in cattle judging, seventh
in hogs, eleventh in sheep, and
fourteenth in horses. The team that
represented A and M was compos
ed of the following senior animal
husbandry students: H. A. Fits-
hugh Tolar; J. W. Richards, New
W !la«d; W. D. Russell, Granbury;
E. H. Hudgins, Hungerford; E. L.
Williams. Carriao Springs; and A.
P. Goforth, Tolar, alternate.
Colored Football
♦ i "I * •, _
Teams Play Game
At Aggie Stadium
Comtog back for their second
game en Kyle Field, the Prairie
View Panthers will meet the strong
Texas College eleven of Tyler on
the Aggie sUdium at 1:00 p. m.,
December 2..
The prairie View squad will be
accompanied by their brass band
and the Prairie View student body,
this means the Panthers will not
be without moral support
Last year the Panthers met and
defeated a team from Arkansas
College and those who saw the
game were as greatly impressed
with the Prairie View rootipg sec
tion as 4hey wese with the football
teem. The co-eds from the “colored
A and M” pat on several novel
stunts and their battle cry of
•‘Touchdown Prairie View, Touch
down Prairie View” has become a
humorous byword on the Aggie
campus
Prairie View ahrays boasts a
strong eleven and usually wins the
colored championship of the state.
This year five players formerly on
the much talked of Bryan High
colored team are members of the
squad and probably will be out to
live up to their reputations before
the home town folks.
College Dailies Are
Fostering Movement
: To Pay Football Men
M nm apolis -(IP)—The Urfver-
*ity of liinne.Hota Daily has fallen
in line *ith those college news
papers of the country which this
year have begun to suggest open
m>d acknowledged policies of pay
ing football players for the work
they do for their colleges.
, fOsaches are shifted as soon as
a team has a losing streak,” says
the Daily. “Everything la done to
keep the team winning and main
tain gate receipts.
-The moat important cog in the
moneymaking machine is the foot
ball player, and his only return is
that tired aching feeling* and a lot
•fighting for the
mater.’ Why not
workers?”
President Wal
Confined To H
As Result of
Dr, T. Ot Walton, president of
the college, suffered a eevere at
tack of erysipelas Monday morn
ing. that necessitated hi| removal
from the college hospital to the
Wilson Memorial Clinic in Bryan.
He is under the care of Dr. J E.
Marsh, college physician, and Dr.
Turner Walton, his son.
An extreme rigor which set in
at eight o’clock Monday morning
and lasted- until eleven o'clock,
forced Dr. Walton to stop brork. As
this article went to pres^ he was
convalescing and waa exp .ted to
be able to return to his home soon.
. ..as "■ -|
Twenty-One Aggie
Gridsters To Get
Coveted T Awards
Recommendations were made to
day for the granting of twenty-one
letters to the members of the 1932
Texas Aggie football team. The
list of men to receive the coveted
Aggie ‘“T” includes eight backs,
three ends, three tackles, five
guards, and two centers. Plsyers
whose services merited them let
ters are: Wright, Murray, and Con-
nelley, ends; 'Jordan. Cummings,
•nd Irwin, tackles; Breedlove, Go-
lasinski. Maxwell. Crow, and Wood
land, guards; Nolan and Love, cen
ters; Spencer, Domingue, Graves,
Barfield, Fowler, Williams, Mewitt,
and Capt. Jimmie Aston, backs.
Of the men listed abov* Capt.
Aston, Graves, Williams. Hewitt,
Wright, Golasinski. Nolan, and
Love are seniors and have played
their last year of varsity football,
while Fowler, Connelley. Jordan.
Maxwell, and Crow are receiving
their first varsity letters as sopho
mores. ; i J. ’ J
Fi rrhnan numeral afwwedn have
not yet been announced.
Fire Destroys Co-Ed
< Dormitory At Alfred
ALFRED, N. Y.—<IP)-*Some
110 women students at Alfre# Uni
versity were driven out iato a snow
storm last week when a fiv*-story
co-ed dormitory was gutted by
flames. Many of the co-eds man
aged to save a few of their per
sonal belongings, but most of the
women lost all they owned at
school.
rS=
Published Weekly By The Student* gf The A. & **• ( ollege of Texa>
COLLEGE STATION/BXAS, 3°. 1932.
Two Campus Buildings Damaged
NUMBER 11
“TEX," FAMOUS
AIRDALE. KILLED
A familiar sight will be
missing from the campus as
-Texas Aggie II”. faaeou*
Hirda le dog owned by R. J
Dunn Director of the A^ffe
Band, was killed on the high
way in front at the College
last week-end.
“Tex” was conceded to be
one of the finest specimens
of the Airdale in the ^Mith-
west, having won a number
of grand prises in vario^
Southwest Kennel competi
tions.
In 1926, when “Tex” was
named Reserve Winner St
the State Fair in Dallas, Mr.
Dunn refused an offer of
five hundred dollars for tha
dog.
“Tex" was seven years old
this month.
By Conflagrations; Last Saturday;
Damages Estimated At $1,05(1
Elliott Announces
Corps Dances Have
Shown Net Profit
Donald Elliott, social secretary
of the senior class, when interview
ed on the outcome of the corps
dances so far this year stated, “Of
the five corps dances given so far
this year, all have shown a profit
with the exception of the one held
on the night of October 29th. The
crowds this year have been about
one-half as large as they were last
year. The dance following the T.
a U -Aggie football game proved
to draw the largest crowd, with
more than twelve hundred in at
tendance.” ‘ *’ , f
There no more big dances
scheduled fbr the remainder of the
school yeaT, but it is hoped that
some of the corps dances following
the various club dances to be held
in the Spring will prove to be un
usual financial assets, Elliott said.
Co-Ed Injured After
Brown-Columbia Tilt
NEW YORK.—<IP)--Mis« June
Joseph, 24, was painfully injured
here when she was struck on the
head by one of the falling uprights
of Columbia's football field goal
posts when the Brown University
fans, overjoyed at Brown’s 7 to 6
defeat at the New York team
swept out on the field to tear d wi
the goals.
South Americans Go
For Football Games
BV’ENOS AIRES—(IP)—If Am
ericans of the north think football
is popular in the states, they should
come down here. Two hundred and
fifty thousand fans attempted to
•ee a championship game here last
week. Only 86,000 could get inU
the game.
River Platte won the Argentine
professional championship by de
feating Independiente 3 to 0.
Police were forced to fire over
the Hgftd* of the huge crowd out
side shield to keep order when a
fight was started between support
ers of the opposing teams.
Texas Leads Nation
With Largest Number
of Public Schools
College Football
Star and Scholar
Becomes Policeman
Chicago—(IP)—The Chicago po
lice force is to have the privilege
of numbering among Its patrolmen
Kenneth A Rouse, graduate of the
University of Chicago and former
captain of the university football
team.
In the university Rouse received
a medal for excellence in scholar
ship and athletics. Of more than
4,500 who took the police examina-
Washington. D. C.—(IP)—Tfcxaa
has more high schools than any
other state in the Union, it wax re
vealed last week by the Fe<*frml
Office o< Education.
Texas has 1.490 high school'.
Ohio has 1,322, Pennsylvania has
1,181, Missouri has 1,063 and Illi
nois 1,065. These states have more
than a foorth of the 23,930 high
schools in the United Sta#s.
To New York City goes the
or of having the largest high
in the country. It ia De Witt
ton, with 10,069 students
largest ia New Utrecht in Brook
lyn, N. Y, with 9.944.
The total enrollment in all
ee of high schools in the
is 5,465,932. More than a half Ail-
lion graduate from American high
schools each year.
policeman.
The peace and quiet that pre-'
vailed on the campus during the
Thanksgiving holidays wss broken
Saturday night bp two fireo. both
of undeterfUaeA origin, which
caused damage estimated at about
$1050 to campus buildings
The first fire occurred between
8:30 and 9:00 a|»i destroyed the
room of Charlie Cummings, Bryan,
and Ike Lowenatein, Ysleta, which
is located on the southwest corner
of the third floor of Foster Hall.
Then- via* no one in the room at
the time of the fir*, but Lowenstein
was oa the first floor of the build
ing listening to the radio with Carl
Taylor aad Hollis Mustain. Atten
tion was first attracted U. the blase
by someone on the outside who saw
the flames curing from the win
dows. Taylor stepped out into the
hall and sa* the blase shooting
over the transom of the burning
room. He called Lowenstein and
with him ran to the top floor of
the building where tl|df secured
some fire extinguishers and start
ed fighting the fire. In ffce mean
time MusUin had gone to notify
fire department but before the
tus reached the scene the
was under control.
-ffaylor. the only person injured,
suffered a badly burned hand when
hf i aught hold of the red hot door
kpob in trying to gain entrance to
\he burning room.
The total loss was estimated at
Mjproximately $800.00, of which
viP* no was lost by the room occu-
papts in personal property.
j The second fire of the week-end
tvccurred in the linen room of the
V." M. C- ■■4 w * 8 discovered
nixnit 4:00 s m. Sunday morning
M Professors V. K. Sagareff and
Ci J. Finney.
The tenants aad employees of
ifc Y. M. C. A. were able to con
trol the flame until the college ap-
^a re tus arrived and the damage
was c onfined to the contents of the
llaxn room which included linen
vacuum cleaners. According to
Axeociate Secretary of
. Ml C. A., the k>es was about
1.00, and was covered by in-
Technoscope Staff
Plans Revjsion Of
Engineering Paper
So enthusiastic w*» the reception
tendered the initial issue of the
Technoscope student publication of Utfmaity law school
the Engineering School under the
editorship of Georfc* H. Samuels,
that it was necesamry to print ex
tra copies to satisfy the demand.
With the success of this issue in
mind, the members of the Techno-
aewpe staif have completed plans
for the future issued by means of
which they intend td wake the pub
lication prove bem0ci*l to those
students supporting R.
According to C. G Johnston, cir
culation manager,
that the second
tributed on Janua
icy of the staff to
to one particular
engineering school
continued at the
era) engineering it
uary issue will 1
from students in
Chemical, Civil, E
ical, and Petrol
written along a
well as those eon
literary nature. Sai
the point that any
sires to submit an
lication should re
will be eligible for
Award, as technical
barred from com
it plana are
will be dis-
10. The pol-
each issue
int of the
has been die
ts of sev-
its. The Jan-
articles
hitectural,
J, Meehan-
Engineering
il line as
itions of a
•Is stressed
nt that de
le for pub-
that they
Press Club
:1cj are not
Waco Rabbi Speaks
hungtH
metab
Rabbi Charles Blumiinthal. Waco
will speak before members of the
Hillel Club. Sunday tight at 7:30
p. m in the Asbury Boom of the
Library. A supper will be given
Sunday evening for pr. Blumen-
tion, Rouse stood third. It has been thal and members of 'lub
a long ambition of his to become a Waco by Dr. and Mrf. Tabenhaua
of College Station.
BIG WHALE COMING
‘*C©Io*u*«a,” Riant whale that weight 68 toot III 55 foot
long. It to be exhibited in Bryan on a 100 foot railway our >t is
near the Southern Pacific depot, Tneoday, December 6, and
Wednesday. December 7th. ■ V'V.J
r man At Tulane
Once Deserter
Stom Foreigrn Legion
EW ORLEANS.— (IP) — I"-
of bullets fired at him as a
>er dt the French Foreign Le-
B*-nnett J. Doty is dodging
ons fired at him as a member
student body of the Tulane
gained international fame
^ _ >#ted from the Legion aft-
er^iterviec distinguished for brav.
,jjie Was sentenced to eight
y re' imprisonment by a French
n itary court, but later was par-
he la forgetting the dangers
of^if foreign life in the more
peagfful problems confronting him
as U freshman in the Tulane law
..V,r .
Asked al>out his desertion from
thofLagbn, Doty told interviewers
herfj:
hid what the French call 'le
which literally means ‘a
your brain.’ It was tem-
madness. I was fed up with
* f" —the filth, the hun-
frqezing cold at night, the
heatl by day.
i’t( care what happened.
;new was that I had to get
awa£ from it all/ so that>ight I
‘weii over the hill’ as they call it
—I deserted. We (two friends were
with* Him) heeded for the British
protdeftpratq. It took me only a
couple, of hours to come to my
•enMXl'aad Jrealixe 1 had made a
•
Illinois Musicians
Sousa’s
Music Library
NA, Hi,—(IP),—The Uni-
pf Illioois has been chosen
•e the vast library of mu-
belonged to the flfte great
ir ! and composer, John
of musical composi-
»>h to fill 42 large
trunksw'ompose the Souaa library
which-'bps been bequeathed *o the
Illini ^ah*-
is enough musk in the
to last the average col-
ten years without eves
a eompo-ition. The three
formally play about
itioDs each year,
of Sousa ia distinctive
Inivefsity of Illinois band
roll, far he was its honorary con-
frof. A. A. Harding has
been in active director for years.
Bnrding was a close friend
and it ia this friendship,
which resulted in the be-
band musk library to
Southwest Conference
! Grid Chart
Fiaal Standing 1H32
C'enfcrcnce Standing
learn
T. C. U
.. 6
la
0
*
1.000 116
18
Texa* j..
5
1
w
.8301106
26
Rice .4.
... $
3
0
.600! 56
55
A. A M.
. 1
2
2
.400 14
45
S. M. UL
U 1
4
1
241 j 19
61
Baylor .
... 1
4
1
.241 25
■ 78
Arkansas
1
4
f
.200 46
ZT*/
Srason Standing
Team
W
L
T
Pet Pts
Op
T. a U,
..10
0
1
.953 283
23
Texas .1
„ 8
2
0
.800 220
49
Rice ...4
» 7
3
<►
.700 )41
77 r
A. A M.
- 4
4
3
600 j 75
78
Baylor
- 3
5
1
.388 77
92
S. M. U.
_ 2
6
2
.333 1 42
91
Arkansas 1
6
2
.322 65
133
of
CORPS DANCE SATURDAY
Aggies Defeated
By Texas l Team
Thanksgiving Day
I The “even year” jinx hjjM good
fat Austin Thsnkagiving Day as the
University of Texas Longhorns de
feated the Aggies by a Beore of
21-0, closing the football season for
both teams. By winning th» Steers
kept unbroken their string of Tur
key Day victories on their home
field and made It necessary for the
Aggies to wait at least two more
years for their first wia in Austin
since 1922.
Starting off with every promise
of playing a nip-and-tuck game tke
teams treated the fans to some ex
cellent football throughout the first
qparter. The Aggie receiver fum
bled the opening kickoff and Tex
as recovered on the A and M four
teen yard line. A gain of ten yards
carried the Steers to a first down
on the four yard line with goal to
go. At this point the Art* line
braced and after four tries the
I ,i'u hm-ns lacked tnche* of having
crossed the xero marker and the
ball went over to A and M. Graves
punted from behind hia goal line
artd got off a kick that carried six
ty-five yafds and the Aggies were
out of danger for the remainder of
the period.
. In the second quarter the Long
horns opened up with an attack
that netted them three touchdowns
and the game. Texas carried the
ball to the one yard line on straight
football aad Hilliard took jfc over
A and M’s left guard for the first
score of the game. “Ox” L
kicked, the extra point The srore-
keeper had hardly marked down
the first touchdown when Koy
passed thirty-five yards to Sutffonl
for the second. Stafford crossed
the Aggie goal line and in turning
around to face the play slipped
down and was on his knee* when
he caught the ball Blanton again
came out of the line and kicked the
extra point After the secoml touch
down A and M kicked off to. Texas.
The Steers carried the ball well in
to Aggie territory before losing it
on downs. Running plays availed
nothing and Fowler got off one of
those touchdown punta to Hilliard
The “Texas Flyer” received the
ball on his own thirty-five yard
line and escorted by Koy and Staf
ford ambled through the entire Ag
gie team for the Longhorn * third
and last touchdown. For the third
time Blanton’a kkk was good and
the scoring for the day wM c*£r-
Turning, on the steam; in the
third and fourth quarters the Ag
gies played on a par with the
Steers but they never serioesly
threatened to score. During the
closing minutes of the game a well
organised passing attack netted
the Farmers ten first downs but
they 1 all came with the baD at or
near midfield-
People who live in cities where
there are skyscrapers will be reas
onably safe from poison gas, H is
asserted by Dr. J. Mitchell Fain,
because such gasses do not rise far
above the ground, and to get away
from them in the next war people
can Climb up n few stone*, in the
tall buildings of their cities.
Will Meet Stephen F. Aus
tin High On Forrest Field.
T|e A and M Freshman B squad
ill engage the Stephen F Austin
BroiKhos of Bryan in a football
with the proceeds going to the
Good Cheer Fund.
Stephen F. Austin boasts a
strong high school club that haa
held its own throughout the past
-t ai-on with some of the most for
midable squads in this section of
the dtate and many of the fish
players have seen service against
the teams that the first year men
have played and can be depended
upon to give a goad account of
themielves. ,\
With the two teams so nearly
matched in strength the game
should be worth seeing from tha
standpoint of football itself with
out < on-idering the charitable as
pect of the eonteet.
Vanderbilt Announces
No 1933 Tulane Game
NASHVILLE. Tenn — (IP) —
Foot ball relations between Vander
bilt i*d Tulane Universities have
been broken tor next year at least,
it wss announced by Vanderbilt,
as a rt’MJlt of a booing which Van
derbilt received early this season
when Vanderbilt tied Tulane, the
first blot on Tulane’s football rec
ord ridee 1928 inrthe Southern
Conference.
Btipwxns State University will
Jm Tola ns's place on the Vander
bilt l93kl schedule, it was announced
by Rail Cehen, member of Van-
derbiltV coaching staff and a for
mer coach at Louisiana State.
Last Day For Club
Pictures Set By i
Longhorn Editor
AU rtXney for club section pic
tures of |the Longhorn most be ia
by December 15. B. M. Gottlieb, cd
itor of j |the yearbook, announced
yestardayT Half payment at thiX
date will be considered but uideaX
the renddnder is paid by March 1) •
club pWttires not wholly paid foe
will not gppear in the annual.
As an Inducement to students to
have thfejr photographs placed in
the varibgs dub sections, the Long
horn snd jthe Aggie land Studio are
making a special offer of two club
nection pictures, a photograph in
the elasp seethm. and a 5x7 por
trait forUpro dollars and fifty centa.
This oflfrt is also open to sopho-
freshmen.
for elub sections are
ied in to T. C. Morris at
in Hall.
New Iowa Tradition
Flat As Omen
IOWA CITY, Iowa—(IP)—That
new “tradition” which Osaie Solewi
brought With him when he became
head football coach at the Univer
sity of Iowa this year, is not en
tirely in favor with the students.
Under the code of the “tradition”
the captain ot the Iowa team from
a distance of twenty paces tossed
a buntw football shoe over his
left -i o ilder toward a pile of
straw. Tkii was on the sve of tha
Iowa-.V>rthwe*tern game.
* If the straw caught fire, Iowa
was to Northwestern by a
narrow margin.
The stfraw caught fire. Score?
Northwestern 44, Iowa 6.
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FRONT BASEMENT
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