ROOM 5 ADMINISTRATION BLDG.—2275 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 16, 1943 VOLUME 43—NUMBER 69 Traditional Bonfire Will Be Held On November 24th Carmen Amaya Appears on Town Hall Stage Thursday Second Feature of Season Stands as Best Of All; Individual Performance, 50^ Carmen Amaya is expected to give the Aggies one of the biggest thrills they will experience while in Aggieland when she apears with her fiery, impassioned gypsy dances at Guion Hall next Thursday, November 18. Accompanying Amaya will be-f" Antonia Triana, her dancing part ner, who has no small amount of fame himself. He is considered the greatest of all male flamenco dancers and has, for a number of years, been recognized as one of the best Spanish dancers in the world. The troup is also composed of Amaya’s dancing sisters, An tonia and Leonor; guitar-playing Papa Jose; brother Paco and cous in Sabicas; pianist Raymond Sachse; and Lola Montes. Miss Amaya, imported from South America by S. Hurok has enchanted audiences throughout Spain, Portugal, South America, Mexico, and the United States. She appeared in the White House in the Spring of 1941 to entertain President and Mrs- Roosevelt and their guests at the Press Dinner. Her impression in Buenos Aires was so great that a theater was named in her honor. Part of Carmen’s good show manship is her terrifying serious ness. Whenever someone laughs or smiles during her dance she glares at him. A photographer once asked her for a sexy shot. She threatened to slit his throat. Her opinion of most gypsy dancing seen in this country is—“It is weak, diluted stuff. But I - - I am straight whis key.” Perhaps this last remark will encourage you Aggies and serv icemen if you have not already done so, to buy your season ticket to Town Hall from your dorm salesman before Thursday for the regular price of 2.00. Individual performances may be seen by pay ing 50tf at the door or obtaining a ticket in advance from the Stu dent Activities Office. Vet Students Meet Wednesday Evening The Junior Chapter of the Amer ican Medical Association will meet this Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock in the auditorium of the Veterinary Hospital. Featured will be a three-reel technicolor film on scarlet fever which no one should miss. Doughnuts and coffee will be served to all who attend. Come early and bring your roommate. Aggie Yell Practice Broadcast Attended By 1500 Students WTAW to Carry Ag Broadcast at 5:30 This afternoon at 5:30 WTAW ■will present a delayed broadcast by transcription of the Aggie yell practice which was held in Houston Saturday morning from 11:30 until 12. The yell practice, originally broadcast over Sta tion KTRH, Houston, was held in front of the Rice Hotel. This program will be of special interest to those 1500 Aggies who were at Houston for the Rice game- Annual Turkey Day Dance To Be Held Wednesday night, November 24, there will be the annual Thanks giving Dance to be held in Sbisa Dining Hall from 9 until 1. This dance will be held immediately after the bonfire which is now beginning its preparation. The arrangements for a dance orchestra have not been completed, although the Student Activities of fice is planning to engage a well known band for the occasion. Those students who have dates must have reservations made, because there are no rooms available for vis itors. The Thanksgiving dance is an annual affair, held every year be fore the Texas University-A.&M. football game- In previous years this dance has always been a high light of the social calendar. Rifle Team To Meet Tomorrow Night at 7 The A. & M. Rifle Team -will hold its first meeting of this sea son next Wednesday night, tomor row, in the Chemistry lecture room at 7:00 p. m., it was announced today by Harold Borofsky, acting team captain. A program has been planned and a discussion of the team and its progress will follow. Members of the team are reminded that they should report to the range at every opportunity and should be present at Wednesday night’s meeting. Appearances of Singing Cadets Made in Houston Cadets To Make Last Appearance Under Jenkins Nov. 20-21 The Singing Cadets of Aggie land, under the direction of Rich ard W. Jenkins, made three ap pearances at the First Methodist Church in Houston Sunday and presented one complete program at the Bering Memorial Church on Harold Street. The first performance was given at 9:30 in the morning at the First Methodist Church, where Richard’s father, Walter Jenkins, is director of music. Two numbers were sung: “The Creation” by Richter and “Prayer of Thanksgiving’’ by Kremser. After an identical per formance had been given for the benefit of the second congregation, the church served a meal in the Servicemen’s Lounge to the Ag gies and servicemen who had come to the morning services. The meal was followed by a special program of more popular music for the benefit of the sailors, soldiers and Marines. The last appearance took place at the Bering Memorial at 7:00 o’clock in the afternoon. This church also provided the Aggies with supper. The Cadets enter tained for the entire service, clos ing the program with the “Spirit of Aggieland” and “Taps.” The Cadets missed the voices of Ralph Greenberg and Watson Keeney who were absent of neces sity, but ex-Singing Cadets from the V-12 Unit at Rice' and Houston reinforced both the tenor and bass sections. At present, the Cadets are pre paring for the trip to Tyler and Henderson next week end. This will be the last trip the group will (See APPEARANCES, Page 4) Aggies Urged Not To Invite Visitors Aggies are requested not to invite visitors to the campus for Wednesday and Thursday, November 24 and 25, unless res ervations have already been made for their accommodations. There will not be a dormitory vacated for the Thanksgiving game to accommodate dates. All vacancies on the campus have been exhausted, and any visitor without a reservation will have a difficult job finding a place to stay- Tigers Win District Championship, 47-0 Thursday afternoon the Consol idated High School Tigers defeat ed the Franklin Eagles 47-0 for the District championship. The Tigers used every man on the team in order to keep the score down as much as possible, but the second and third string did as well as the first. The Tigers used their excellent ground game to a good advantage. The Tigers threw many passes, but depended on their ground offense for the scoring punch. The Tigers also boast a strong defense in allowing the Eagles 3 first downs. Their line has been improving from game to game and has at last reached the required peak in teamwork. The Tiger touchdowns were made by Cashion, Carroll, who intercept ed an Eagle pass and raced 40 yards for a touchdown, Marshall and Bonnen. In District 20 Granger, Marble Falls, and Roundrock are tied for first place and as soon as the district committee meets and de cides the winner the date will be set for the bi-district play-off. Conference Cross Country Meet Being Held Here Wed. A&M and Texas Are The Only Schools To Enter Full Teams The Southwest Conference Cross Country meet will be held here Wednesday at 3:00 p.m. Runners from all Conference schools will be here but A. & M. and Texas University are the only schools that will enter full teams and com pete for the team championship. Texas has a strong team led by Jerry Thompson who last spring was National Collegiate two-mile champion. He also finished first in Conference Cross Country last fall. The A. & M. team has been se lected from boys who have devel oped speed and stamina in the A- & M. compulsory wartime physical education program. Not one of these boys has competed in a track meet during high school or college. This team of graduates from the now famous 1.6 mile Penberthy “Bunion Derby” is a real twelfth- man team of which the Aggies are proud and one that will give the Longhorns a stiff battle. The race is three miles and will start 300 yards west of the gym nasium and will finish at the cav alry stables. Running for A. & M. will be: F. R. Mason, E. L. Posey, R. C. Webb, C. D. Brown, J. R- Vaughn, Clem Dahse, J. Bradford, Danny Green and W. E, Berry. Camera Club to Meet Wednesday at 6:30 A special meeting of the Camera Club will be held Wednesday night at 6:30 in the Tower of the Pe troleum Building, announced Claude Stone, president. Aggies, members of the faculty, and servicemen are urged to attend, as important mat ters will be discussed. Will Aggieland Turn Co-Ed? Sweet Scented Letter (From Girl) Asks Admittance to College Saturday morning from 11:30 to 12, approximately 1500 Aggies gathered in front of the Rice Hotel on Texas Avenue in Houston to present a typical yell practice to thousands of radio listeners. The program was broadcast over Sta tion KTRH, and Ted Niever an nounced, introducing Jack Knox, head yell leader. Art Graf and Hayes Stripling, assistant yell leaders, were present to assist in leading the yells. The 90-piece Aggie Band fur nished music for the occasion. The program began with “Wildcat,” followed by the Corps giving ten of the more popular Aggie yells and singing “The Aggie War Hymn” and “Twelfth Man.’’ Knox then gave a speech urging the team to victory. Niever introduced each yell as to its origin. The pro gram was concluded with “The Spirit of Aggieland.” About thirty Rice students tried to out-yell the Aggies and inter rupt the broadcast, although their attempts were futile. Freshman Killed Boarding Train Saturday morning at 3 o’clock, John Richard Carlson, a freshman of this college, was killed by a freight train in Navasota. Carlson was on the way to the football game in Houston at the time of his death. Having ridden to Nava sota on a passenger train, he was in the act of catching a ride on a freight when he was hit by a sign post along the track- This caused a fatal concussion of the brain. The bump knocked Carlson be neath the train, cutting off his lower appendages at the feet. Though the accident was fatal, he lived for several hours afterwards. John Carlson was bom to Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Carlson on Septem ber 19, 1926. He attended high school in Palestine before coming to A. and M. in the summer of 1943. He was in A Company In fantry and was taking Chemical Engineering. He resided in Room 214 of Dormitory 16 with his room mate, J. B. Crawley. The Battalion stafcf together with the remainder of the stu dents on the campus join in ex tending their deepest sympathy to the bereaved parents. By Charles R. West “Breathes there an Aggie With soul so dead, Who never to himself hath said, ‘How I wish A&M were co-ed!”’ Last month, a faintly perfumed letter that closely resembled one of our “sugar reports,” appeared addressed to the President of the Student Body of A. & M. in a vain attempt to change the present con dition of Aggieland somewhat. Naturally enough, in an all-male military college there doesn’t hap pen to exist such a president, so the letter was addressed to “some body that ain’t”. From office to office the letter was transferred. The older gener ation blushed and hurriedly passed the sweet-scented epistle to an other more susceptible office be fore their wives happened to drop in. The younger men were inclined to copy down the neatly typed ad dress before they reluctantly passed it on—and on—and on. Un til finally your snooping reporter snitched it and, thinking that most Aggies would deeply appreciate such an epistle, “Love and Kisses” (I’m tired of hearing “Yours truly”) is taking the responsibil ity and liberty of telling you what was in that purloined letter. Oh well, I may as well let you read it yourself— “My dear Sir: “It is with great humility that I tell you my story. To begin, I must say, that after many years of indecision I suddenly arrived, a couple of years ago (and thanks to a benign psychosis), to what some might call a precocious decision that I had found the thing in life I desired most to do. To be brief, I desire to enter the School of Vet erinary Medicine at your good college. “To begin at the beginning, I have been out of high school two years' and have spent considerable time in assisting Dr. Reese Mitch am, one of the leading veterina rians in the south. Aside from this empirical knowledge, my grades were unusually good. I was a mem- Patsy Long ★ ★ ★ ber of the National Junior Honor Society and the National Honor Society. “Of course, I understand that the fact that an individual desires to enter your school poses no great problem, but if that individual is a female, that, of course, is a problem. “To reiterate, I desire to attend a Veterinary College, and because of the inimitable faculty of A- & M., I am anxious beyond expres sion to go there. “I beseech you, in name of all the indomitable courage that held the Alamo, the will that was Hous ton, and in the name of the chival ry that is Texas, to fight for this cause, which I am sure is just. “Although, from the standpoint of pure anatomical beauty, I fear I cannot compete with the girls who make it difficult for Esquire to negotiate the mails, I am en closing a picture in humble evi dence to the fact I will exert every effort to live up to the jaunty standards of raiment of A. & M. as well as those of honor, disci pline and behavior. “I know such a request as this is shocking, but all I ask is the right to attend certain classes and receive a degree. As a precedent I will cite the case of one Will Smith, an Arkansas negro, who asked permission to attend the Uni versity of Arkansas (which school I saw you so nobly conquer on the gridiron last October.) His request was granted. He lived in a coal house behind the main building and was tutored aside from the other students, receiving his degree about 1898. Although my dates may be incorrect, I point out to you this example of the universally altruis tic reputation of the pedogogical institutions. “I beseech you to post this ap plication for entrance where it will do the most benefit to my cause. I am “Very sincerely yours, PATSY LONG.” (Return address: Reserved for the author’s personal use). Well, fellows, you see that we are not the only ones who get the occasional urge to change present conditions. Consequently, on sec ond thought, I guess it wouldn’t be a bad idea for some of you fel- j lows to drop the young lady a bitj of encouragement along with that old Aggie line to 335 Hall Build ing, Little Rock, Arkansas. Her enclosed snapshot proves all the things I’ve been saying about the feminine allure in Arkansas. Plans for Annual Fire and Yell Practice Being Made Building and College Utilities Dept, to Provide Trucks, Freshmen to Gather Wood Preparations for the annual pre-Thanksgiving Day Bon fire are now being made by head yell leader, Jack Knox, in cooperation with B. D. Marburger of the Building and College Utilities Department. — — ^ The bonfire will be held on the Silver Taps Played drill field across from Law and For Aggie Monday Silver Taps was observed last night in memory of John Rich ard Carlson, a Texas Aggie freshman, who died early Sat urday morning in Navasota, while attempting to catch a Houston-bound freight for the Rice game. The traditional Silver Taps is played as a final tribute to a deceased Aggie. Six trumpeters played Taps three times from the dome of the Academic Build ing while the entire Corps stood at attention. A. S. M. E. Meets in M. E. Building at 7:15 Tomorrow Nite Feature of Meeting Will Be Welcome of Engineers to Society • Help sessions for Engineering students will be one of the fea tures of tomorrow night’s meeting of the student branch of the Amer ican Society of Mechanical Engi neers. From 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. tomor row night in Room 303 M.E. Build ing, there will be a snappy meet ing full of interest and profit for all. The A.S.T.P. men are espe cially invited to join with us for an enjoyable hour. After a short period of an nouncements, the meetting will break into four smaller groups. There will be help sessions for freshman engineers and an inter esting program on steel for the more advanced students. For those who desire neither of the above, there will be a talk on how to use a slide rule. For M.E. 101 students there will be individual help to prepare them for their B Quiz- This help session will be conducted by H. A. Borde lon, J. E. Gandler, Hal Puckett and Thomas Sessums. For M.E. 102 students there will be a lecture on Free Bodies and Equilibrium by Professor J. George H. Thpmpson. This is designed to help the men with their letter quiz this week. Professor Lee Price Thompson, who has given a number of previ ous talks on the subject, will give instruction on how to run a slide rule. This talk will be designed for those who have never run a slide rule or who are just beginning rather than for advanced students. Professor Thompson will be avail able at another meeting for the more advanced students of the slide rule. The technical meeting for the Junior and Senior Engineering students will be given on the topic “Steel—An Engineering Material. Professor E. G. Berryman will be available to answer any questions on research developments and their applications in war indus tries- Mr. Max B. Gebauer, re cently of the American Rolling Mill Company, will be available to answer questions concerning the steel industry and its possibilities in Texas. A sound motion picture on “Heat Treating of Steels” will be shown. H. D. McMillan and J. T. Tansil are in charge of meetings for No vember and December. These men will be happy to hear of requests for special features anyone might desire for the December meeting.] Puryear Halls as in previous years, on November 24, the day preced ing the Texas-A.&M- football clas sic. It will begin about 7:30 or 8 o’clock in the evening, followed by the Thanksgiving Dance which will be held in Sbisa Hall at 9 p.m. The bonfire is the greatest event of the football season, with the exception of the Turkey Day bat tle itself. The B&CU Department of the College will provide trucks for hauling lumber to be burned. Each truck will be accompanied by six freshmen, who will help load the lumber. Track drivers will desig nate which lumber will be collect ed, although the freshmen should also know where material can be secured. Only useless wood can be used for the bonfire, as the college does not want to destroy any valuable property. Such wood may include dead trees, old telephone poles, or old lumber from repaired dormi tories. Further information will appear in the next issue of the Battalion. As yet, the time to begin work has not been announced, although everyone can begin looking for lumber. Pre-Medical Society To Meet Wed. Night The A. & M. Pre-Medical Society will meet Wednesday night, No vember 1 7at 7 o’clock in room 30 of the Science Hall. This will be the second meeting of the semes ter for the club, and a special ad dress will be delivered which should interest all students taking courses preparatory to medicine. The club meets on alternate Wednesday nights, and during the semester many interesting and helpful programs, including special movies, will be presented. All stu dents interested are invited to be present tomorrow night and if they have not done so, to join the chib. Sammy Owl Returns To Roost After A Night in Rice Hotel Sammy Owl, the Rice Institute mascot, mysteriously disappeared I from its hiding place last Friday | night and was checked at the Rice Hotel in the name of Alvin Duvall, Assistant City Editor of the Hous ton Post. For hours the rooty-ty-toot boys from the Institute prowled over the Aggie-gration and repeated “Who? - - Who? - - Who?” Nat urally no one knew. Conditions were rapidly reversing themselves for instead of the Owls bearing their trade mark, the Aggies spread their feet, crossed their arms—and looked very, very wise. However, plans were upset when hotel managers, fearing a lobby battle between the Cadets and the Owls, sent Sammy to its old hole in an ambulance Saturday morn ing. During the game Rice offi cials (wisely enough) kept Sammy indoors. The custom has it that the blue and gray bird rest on the sideline during each Rice game. (It would have taken more than a stuffed owl to keep them from be ing run over by our boys!) Still the Rice Owls are wonder ing who? - - who? - - who? and still the Aggies look very, very wise I