rT* FRONT BASEMENT- LIBR AR Airicultma I & Mechanical Collie ot Um| College Station, Texas. iVriAIKN T. F. Box 134 *. E. — - >' ■■■■"*" — Published Weekly By The Students of The A. A M. College of Texas , r • J L , I T. * r # VOLUME XXXIV t ... - • . * COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS. December s. itt4 NUMBER 11 U Steers Defeat Agies Thursday T 13 To 0 At Memorial Stadium; 25,000 Fans See Muddy Contest Game Is Played in Cold Northerly Wind With Soaked B*U; Short Wobbly Punts and Many Fumbles Made 1 THIRD QUARTER FAVORS FARMERS Fowler Leads Crushing Drive; Threatens To Score, But Onslaught Is Finally Halted on Seven-Yard Mark Playing on a rain-soaked field and in a chilling north wind the Texas Aggies went down before a powerful Univer sity of Texas eleven, 18 to 0, at Memorial Stadium in Austin Thanksgiving Day. A crowd 5f about 26,000 spirited football fans, about 16,000 short of fair weather expectations, shiv ered their way through more than two hours of a delayed contest to witness two mud-covered teams put up one of the toughest battles of the season. , The Steers were not able to crash the Aggie defense until the second quarter when Hugh Wolfe crashed over the line for the initial marker.} The drive started at the begin- OF TED i ne onve sianea ai me oegin- t , • n ning of the second period \66\t oPCHKCrS when Couser's punt was par-1 r Win Debate From Rice Institute punt was par /tially blocked, and Texas took the ball on the Aggie 45 yard stripe. Hilliard dropped back and heaved a pass to Pi tier which placed the oval on the Aggie 14 'yard line. Wolfe picked up four yards at guard. The mighty Hil liard was held for no gain as he was stopped at the line of scrim mage by WUUs. Hilliard then made five at tackle. Wolfe made it a first down on the Aggie two yard line. Hilliard got a yard at the Aggie line. He then carried the ball to the one foot line. On the next play Kimbrough threw Wolfe for a two yard loss. Then Wolfe hit the line for the remaining two yards and a touchdown. Hilliard's kick for extrs point was wide. Afgies Threaten ia Third Period It looked as though the Aggie* were going to score in the third quarter as “Muggins" Fowler led the Cadets to their nearest counter of the contest. With the ball on the Aggie 38 yard line, Fowler faked a kick, and then galloped 18 yards to the Texas 42 yard line. Kimbrough fumble^, recovered, and loet five yards. Pitner’s long pass was incomplete, and Fowler punt ed out of bounds on the Texas 18 yard line. On the first play, Pitser ' % (Continued on page 5) K-OET KAPERS BILL BRADFORD <7 NOTICE SINNERS OF THE CAMPUS • v y f j WHO LAST WEEK 1 t END RAISED A / RUMPUS, YOU ~ CAN BOAST , > YOUR SINS 4 4 TO HEART’S CONTENT, FOR THEY WERE TOO BAD FOR US TO 4 PRINT, BUT ’LESS YOU FORGET AND HAVE YOUR RE- . ' GRET, THERE » t * ^ ’ ** * ■' • 7 AINT NO REST * vi i f « 4 *; J FOR THE WICKED. Wyse, Butler, Nelson Defeat Rice First Time ia Three Years Upholding the affirmative side of the question “Resolved that the United States should adept a sys tem of socialised medicine," the de bate team representing A and M won from the Rice Institute team in their first intercollegiate meet in Houston Nov. 28. The team, coniponed of G. E. Wyse, Palestine, J. H. Butler, Luf kin, and E. C. Neieoe, Beaumont, did what no other A and M debate team has been able to do in the last three years when they defeated RjFe Institute by a judges decision of 2 to 1. The Rice team, debating the same side of the question, had defeated a team from Louisans .state University by a 8 to 0 de cision and confidently expected to win from the Aggies, bui luceresi Habits of Chaparral Cock Theme of Talk BN Claimed To Be Snake Kiler; Useful As In sect Destroyer Texas folk lore was the subject -jpon which Gates Thomas of San Karros Teachers College address ed the Scholarship! Honor Society st a meeting held Monday night in the Asbury room of the library. Mr. Thomas, who is,-n .cknow- ledged authority on the subject of Texas folk lore, chose as his cen tal subject the stories about the road-vfcsasfc-the bird common to many parts of Texas, and recently" chosen to be the bird of the Texas £olk Lore Society. The scientific side of the bird’s.life and habits and his fabled powers and feats were discussed. The story of the method a road-, runner uses in killing a rattle snake and the truthfulness of this tale is often doubted^ but Mr. Tho mas told of an incident related by an Arizona rancher which illus trated the segacity of the bird. The humor with which various writers have treated the stories of the chaparral and their aid in giving them impetus were discuss ed by Mr. Thomas, who has made a study of these writers. A. H. DEPARTMENT RILLS CATTLE IN RELIEF WORK HERE A and M’s snimal husbandry de partment has been cooperating in the emergency program of killing ~attl« as a drouth relief measure *or the past five month, 10,500 ......v.i having been killed. began'to* swing to*tike ‘afflnaative^ Yhe P ro * r * m originated here on as soon as Butler, the first speak er, began his address. Rice students pot themselves out to show the cadets over the campus and entertained them during their stay at the school and the debaters expressed their appreciation for these favors. A large crowd at tended the mfeV and it was re marked that the girls at Rice seem- (Continued on page 5) Scientist Declines Restoration Offer B^keley, Calif.— Dr. Robert F. Cornish, famous for his experi ments in which he revived a dead dog, was forced to refuse the of fer of a high school boy who volun teered to be put to deatjf and then be revived. The would-be experimenter wrote Dr. Cornish that he thought that the experiment would help him in his scientific studies. t S— : the campus through the efforts of members of the extension service department, and soon after the plan was accepted many canneries had jobs waiting for people on relief rolls. The killing started at the Collegd in the slaughtering quar ters. of the Animal Industries Building on June 80, and since that time the canning plant in Bryan has helped over 300 families who were previously on relief rolls. The meat is refrigerated and then boned out. the boned meat being sent to Bryan, where it is handled by the relief commission. About 100 head a day have been killed, said D. W. Williams, head of the animal husbandry depart ment. He also stated that the de partment’s payroll had in ex cess of flOO a day in payment of the salaries of tboas who have been hired to do this killing. The College is slaughtering under con tract Kith the government, an In spector having been placed hers. MCS i , vfAJC£*J r LW- Hie orchestra leader who will bring his bend here Fri day night for a concert and dance. The concert is to be at eight o’clock in Goion Hall, while the dance will begin at ten in the mess hall. JUDGES PDCE TUI IT MEET : Livestock Men Rank High in All Classes Chicago Contest No Scare To Winners Entered Front A and It' Mogford States Jap Mills Are Efficient Favorable Position of U. 8. In Relation to Foreign Markets Cited J. S. Mogford, head of the agro nomy department, addressed a meeting of the Social Science Sem inar Monday night in the lecture room of the physics building upon “Tht Japanese Cotton Industry", bringing out many points on the relations of the United States and Japan in this field. The favorable position of the U. S. in relation to foreign markets and especially that of Japen mak es the purchase of American cot ton more profitable and expedient, thus boosting the consumption of our product. Mr. Mogford stated that the percentage of the total amount of cotton used by Japan that is American has risen in thirty years from seventeen per cent to sixty-six per cent. In the newly acquired lands of the Japanese there is being put into effect a growing program to increase the production of native cotton which will be used in the excellent mills of the island nation. These mills, and in fact the en tire industry, according to Mr. Mogford, are controlled by a small number of influential families. The importing companies are charac-> ten zed by the same perfection as the milb. FROSH AND SOPH CLASSES ARE GIVEN THE OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE PICTURES INCLUDED IN THE SCHOOL YEARBOOK X 1 Freshmen! Sophomore ’ Don those number ones and get those faces “reg," for Dame Opportu nity b once again easting her fav oring eye in your direction. For the first time in many years, the noble experiment—that of in cluding individual pictures of the entire freshman and sophomore classes in the Longhorn—is again proposed, and its success or failure rests with you. In the dim and distant past was the same experiment the subsequent failure has been evident From year to year a la mentable precedent has gained considerable force, as only the jun ior .and senior classes have been represented in the school annual. That this has been wrong b ad mitted by all, and loudly proebim- ed by the underebssea, and the cause of this injustice has been due, not to opposition of the upper classmen, but to tile indifference of the two undHtfMMk Tony Heldenfeb, Longhorn edi tor, b anxious to edit an annual this year that is representative of the entire student body, and co operation in this plan would dem onstrate student approval. It’s up to you, freshmen and sophomores, do yau want those pic tares? Texas A and M placed third in all ebsses of the collegiate live stock judging contests held in Chi cago Saturday, first in the sheep judging. Third place individual honors were carried off by R. E. Evers from Itasca. Leaving on Friday, November 22, the judging team boarded the. train for Chicago, and the fanners’ world fair called the International Livestock Exposition. Toms from colleges all over the United Stqtes participated in the contest. The team was given a rousing send-off on the preceding Thurs day by the Saddle and Sirloin Club at a banquet held in the animal i. husbandry pavilion. During GW , course of the banquet speeches re made by honored, members present. / $ . .. Members of the team who woa honors at Chicago are as follows: R. E. Evers, Itasca; F. C. Shillin- burg, Dublin; M. E. Templeton, Dublin; W. L. Boothe, Sweetwater; J. L Richmond, Kyle. The team b coached by J. H. Knox, professor in the animal husbandry depart ment. . COLLEGE IS NOT FOR ALL, AYERS 0. C. PRESIDENT Modification of - Nazi University Regulations Seen Barrackg, Dress Mandates May Be Suspended ; Curri ed him To Stay Unaltered Berlin.— Academic freedom in German universities, suspended al most entirely- by the Nasi regime, saw a ray of hope in the admis sion on the part of the Nasi gov ernment that it cannot force all university students to live in mili tary barracks and wear the Nazi uniform. The admission came in the form' of an order easing up on a form er regulation that such require- mta were neeesaary. Many stu dent fraternal organization! throughout Germany had objected strenuously, and in many cases strikes wei Schenectady, N. Y.—The new era into which the United States b entering involves, among o^jer things, elimination of the idea of higher education for everyone, in the opinion of Dr. Dizon Ryan Fox, new president of Union Col- leire. The nation, once obsessed by the idea that everybody was fR for college, b awaking to the 'act, he said, that it cannot af ford that luxury for alL • “With this idea that everybody wsz.fit for college," he averred, “we have tend**/ to make the col lege fit for everybody. On the whole, the results have been hap py for the mass, but it has con fused standards. We should not pay heavily out of taxes or en- Jowmants to educate second and third rate minds for leadership that they cannot assume, but pay as heavily as possible to educate first-class minds." Dr. Fox also urged hb faculty and students to Striks a happy medium between respect for tra dition and respect for mental pioneering. Parade of Corps In Austin Is Praised As Finest In History Of A And M; Staged By 1,500 Column of Platoons Is Greater in Depth Than Business Section; Reaches From CapitoL Building to First Street GOV. ferguson witnesses review Band Plays Opposite Reviewing Stand, Placed On West Balcony of the Stephen F. Austin Hotel A virtual shower of congratulations has been handed to the cadet corps over the past week-«nd, praising in no small terms the parade staged in Austin Thursday, previous to the A and M-Texaa football game at Memorial Stadium. Extending down Congress Avenue from the Capitol to First Street, the parade was of such length that many per sons in authority reported it the4fcurgest in the history of A and M. Governor Miriam A. Ferguson was among those who witnessed the spectacle from the reviewing stand, placed on the west balcony of the Steph- TwoComediesAre Staged By Group of Local Players Suramey Gives Address to Club on Early English Drama as Preface Two onc-act plays, “Fora," a comedy about golf, and a medieval miracle pby, “Noah’s Ark," were presented at the meeting of the A end M Little Theatre Club in the Aebury room of the Library on New. 3fl. “Fore," an amusing modern com edy by Clifford Grey, was ably given by a east which included Sam Crenshaw az Henry Haynes, Mrs. Kate Parker az Myra, and Maurice Young as Harold S. Jones. The pby was directed by Mrs. Maurice Young. “Noah's Ark" was a broad farce, one of the miracle pbys that was popular in the Middle Agee. These pbys, which were presented on wagons that traveled around the country, were based on incidents in the Bible, but they contained a great deal ef low comedy. Since there were no actresses in me dieval times, the parts of both sexes were taken by men. This feature was retained in the little theatre presentation. Lavaca County Club Will Present Dance The Lavaca County Club will have its Christmas dance in the American Legion Hall the night after Christinas in Halletsville. The club has arranged for the services of Lee Prmose and hb or chestra from Schulenburg to pby for the dance, which will begin at nine end last until one. Each man will be in regubtion uniform for the Grand March to be held at midnight. en F. Austin Hotel The Corps formed in 4 line of battalions on First Street, with infantry regiment in ad vance, and moved out on Con- greaa Avenue, in platoon for mation, toward the Capitol situated on the north' end of Con gress, past the Austin business sec tion. Pulling out from Seventh Street, the band marched at tha head of the column to the review ing stand, opposite which It play ed as the remainder of the Corps marched by. Approximately 1500 cadets made , up the parade, composed of 69 pla toons. According to Cadet Colonel J. C. McHaney, the bat battalion of artillery pulled out from First Street just as his staff reached the front of the Capitol grounds, mean ing that the parade extended over the entire length of Congress Ave- nua—Jhe length of the Austin downtown section. Commenting on this erhditabb . showing, Dr, T. O. Walton, Presi dent of the College, said: “I feel that the student body b to be com mended for the success of a mag nificent effort.” “Credit should also be extended", Dr. Walton pointed out, "to the people and city officials of Austin, for their very generous coopera tion.";. NATIONAL CHIT-CHAT by George Wonnacott MASTER OF INCOMPARABLE MUSIC BRINGS ORCHESTRA HERE FRIDAY TO PRESENT CONCERT AND DANCE That familbr radio greeting “Hello everybody—Lopes speak ing" will be heard in the original when Vincent Lopes, nationally popular pianist and conductor, wrings hb Hotol St Regis Orches tra to entertain at the scheduled concert end dance Friday evening December 7. The concert will be at eight o’clock in Colon Hall, whib the dance, to be held in the meee hall, will begin at tan o’clock. Credited with much renown both as a p>ano virtuoso and a compet ent orchestra leader, Lopes b con- . by many to have the ten fastest fingers on radio, and b widely acebimed for his concert renditions of such old favoritos as "Nob." “Kitten on the Keys." and “Canadian Capers." Hb piano solos are the highlights of any of his regubr NBC broadcasts, and will feature the concert here. The eon- cert will not be limited, however, to Lopes selections, as tha trick drummer, who appeared in “The Big Broadcast" will again bast and snare himself into a frenzy, and Frances Hunt, blues singer; Fred Lowery, the whistler; Stanley Worth and Leil Briggs will all as sist in presenting a well-bafenced program. James A Smith, President of Louisiana State University expell ed two students for daring to cri ticize Huey P. Long's action in appointing Abe Michel to the State Senate. The “Kingfbh” surely selb himself quite completely when the president of a university wig take such action, so as not to incur the displeasure of that great individ- eal. However what does the career •f two students mean whon one considers that nothing should stand in the way of the state idol and potential' MndMate for the pres idency T Hear Lopez and His Orchestra Friday Night! The National Interfraterafty Conference, at a meeting held jin New York was confronted with the question whether or not fraterni ties tended to further the scholas tic endeavor of those who were members. It was shown by reports that nineteen fir*teraities did assist in the promotion of studies, whib forty-seven were shown to have been a hindrance. The reason giv en for the failure of these frater nities to induce greater effort on the pert of the participants was that the trend was toward the lighter things ia life rather than the more serious. In other words “lets join a fraternity and have a good time". •i Like all great dramatic figures, Mickey Moose k considering of fers from foreign countries pre paratory to a barnstorming tour. Mickey has had offers from Eng land, Australia, and Canada, since hb Thanksgiving day parade which was viewed by thousands. He ap peared as a rubber inflated figuru, ONT EM ENT ^