Aggies Open With North Texas On Kyle Field Eagles Face Farmers In First Game Since 1942 Norton Says All Squadmen Will Play Some Part of Game Against Eagles The Eagles from North Texas State College journey down from up Denton way to take on the mighty Aggie eleven for the season opener for both teams on Saturday, September .21. This is to be the first team to represent North Texas on the gridiron since before the war as they dropped all inter-collegiate sports during the war years. The Eagles will lack experienced men from recent years, but they will have the usual crop of returning service men to make up for the lack of experience from other quarters. This is the second meeting of the Eagles and the Aggies. The previous encounter was in 1928, Dana X. Bible’s last year as coach, when the Aggies gave the Eagles a sound drubbing to the tune of 44-0. That year the Eagles were op posed by a relatively weak Aggie team, as the ’28 Aggies won only five out of a ten game schedule. This year the Eagles will have to meet one of the strongest Aggie teams in gridiron history. Norton will start his first string against the Eagles Saturday after noon, but he expects to let the majority of the team play at some time during the afternoon. If the coach’s plans go as scheduled, ap proximately fifty men will see action at some time or another against the Eagles Saturday. Although the Aggies will not be playing a team of the Southwest Conference Sathrday, the competi tion should still be keen, as this is purportedly one of the greatest elevens ever to represent the Eagles on the gridiron. This year the Eagles have three all-confer ence players from recent years in their lineup: Oglesby, right end, McCain, quarterback, and Curnutt, left guard. All three of these men made the mythical Lone Star Con ference eleven before they went in to the service, and James Paul Cooper, the Eagle center, is a let- terman from T. C. U. who has transferred to NTSC. All of these stars intend to make the Eagles one of the top contenders for the Lone Star Conference crown, and they will be out Saturday trying to knock off the Aggies. First Meeting of Astronomy Club to Be Held Tuesday The newest society on the cam pus, the A. & M. Astronomy Club, will hold its first meeting in the Physics Building on Tuesday, Sep tember 24, at 7:30 p. m. Dick Bo lin, temporary chairman, will pre side at this organizational meeting, and all students present will be charter members. One of the primary objectives of the Astronomy Club is the con struction of an observatory from the roof of the Physics Building to be ready for use at all times. The new society will view the heavens from atop this building with the aid of Professor E. E. Vezey’s tel escope, which he made in 1934. Twelve inches in diameter, the tel escope is two and one half inches in width and has a focal length of six feet. The telescope, of the Newtonian principle, has a pyrex lens and a yoke type mounting. Professor Vezey spent 120 hours in grinding and polishing the ap paratus. All persons interested in astron omical studies are urged to attend this first meeting. Post-Game Dance Slated in Santone A post-game dance at the Gun ter Hotel Rose Room following the A. & M. - Texas Tech foot ball contest will be sponsored by the San Antonio A. & M. Club on Sept. 28, according to Tommy John, vice-president of the San Antonio Aggies. Dancing will be from 11 p. m. to ?y30 a. m. to the music of Bob by 'Geisler and his 16-piece or- 'chestra. Ducats are being offered for couples or stag, and may be procured from any San Antonio Aggie. Architecture Sets Record Enrollment The Architecture Department with 330 students is beginning the new school year with the largest enrollment in architectural sub jects in the history of the depart ment. This figure includes also the largest freshman class with 125 students registered, in addition to many returning veteran ex-stu- dents. Thirty-five freshman stu dents are at the Bryan Field An nex beginning a parallel course to that of the first year students on the campus. The addition of five new instruc tors brings the total teaching staff of the department to ten. New members of the enlarged staff in clude Hal Mosely, ’40, formerly chief designer with Archie Swank, prominent Dallas architect; John Weber, Iowa State College, ’27, formerly industrial designer with J. Gordon Lippencott, Chicago; and three returning veterans: T. R. Holleman, ’40, Gordon McCutch- eon, ’42, and Doyle Hammons, '42. Rooms for Aggie Dates Are Needed Anyone living in or near the college area and having rooms to rent to Aggie dates who come down to the season’s functions is requested to notify the Col lege Placement Office by calling 4-1196. The following informa tion should be given: name, ad dress, telephone number, num ber of rooms, occupants per room, and amount of charge. The crowded condition of the college necessitates this action and all who can help are urged to comply. Hugh Gillespie Dies in Crash Of Light Plane Hugh Gillespie, senior Aero nautical student from Corsicana, was killed Saturday evening and his brother-in-law, H. R. Stroube Jr., was critically injured in a light-plane crash which occured one mile from the Corsicana Municipal Airport. Gillespie was taking some of his friends and relatives for a ride in his BT-13, which he recently pur chased from the Army, and had just taken off with Stroube when engine trouble developed. He nosed the ship down and was making an effort to land on a near by high way when it went into a spin and crashed into a ditch near the road. Hugh Gillespie first entered A. & M. in 1944, transferring here from Kilgore Junior College. Dur ing the war he worked for the Kil gore Flying School. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Gillespie, Corsi cana; two brothers, Cambell Jr. of Texas Tech., and George Gillespie of Texas A. and M.; a sistei 1 , Mrs. H. R. Stroube Jr., Corsicana, and other relatives. Silver taps were held for„Gilles- pie Tuesday night at 10:15 P. M. Vets Must Fill Forms Friday Or Lose Payment All veterans in school under Part VIII of the G. I. Bill (non disabled veterans) must report to the Veterans Lounge in Sbisa Hall Friday, September 20 be tween the hours of 8:00 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. to complete form which must be turned in before subsistence checks will be mail ed. Six Profs Added To Department Of Agriculture Dean C. N. Shepardson of the Texas A. & M. College School of Agriculture recently announced ad dition of six new members of the teaching staff. They are D. J.Han- kenson, A. V. Moore, John R. Ber- tx-and, Jim F. Mills, T. F. P. Wisch- kaemper and J. L. Zei’r. Professor Moore rejoins the Dairy Husbandry department. He has just x’eturned from Michigan State College where he was doing work on his doctor’s degi’ee. Pro fessor Moore will be in chai’ge of the dairy manufacturing division of the college creamery. Dr. Han- kenson, who comes to the college from industry, will be associate professor working with Professor Moore. Reserve Officers Hold First Meeting The Reserve Officers’ Associa tion of College Station and vicinity held a meeting Tuesday night in the Geology lecture room at 7:30 p.m. C. G. Kirkbride, eyewitness scientific worker to Operation Crossroads, gave a talk covei'ing the background, purpose, and ef fect of the Atomic bomb test at Bikini. After Kirkbride’s lecture, appli cation blanks were passed out to potential members. Anyone having a reserve commission may join the association upon payment of five dollars dues. The next meeting was slated for October. The latest issue of each of 750 magazines is available in the mag azine room of the A. & M. library. Texas A«M The B alion VOLUME 46 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 19, 1946 NUMBER 3 McCormick Elected Senior Class Prexy “Yea-a-a-a, ’Gig em, Aggies!” These are the fellows who keep the Twelfth Man yelling in unison. From left to right: Bill Beck, veteran yell leader; Dutch Hartman, junior; Bill Rosser, senior; Asa Holleman, junior; and E. C. Kobs, senior. Work Begun On the Improvement of Dancing Pavilion Larger Stage and Slab, Outdoor Theater Among Proposed Improvements Goods news for Aggie dancers is the proposed plan to enlarge the Grove, outdoor dancing pavilion, to three times its present size, the Student Activities Office has an nounced. Work began on this pro ject just recently, and it is hoped that the new aixd better Grove will be initiated within the next two months. As may be remembered by many returning students, the Grove was dedicated in the summer of 1942, with the music of Ina Ray Hutton and her orchestra. Enlarging the slab will accommodate more coup les than heretofore and will lessen the congestion of dance fans. In addition to enlarging the dance floor, the stage will be in creased in size to accommodate outdoor shows. Rest rooms will be installed, and tables and chairs will be placed around the slab among the cedar trees. An out door projection booth will be ai’- ranged so as to provide for open- air movies. In order to insure pi'i- vacy, a chain-link fence will sur round the Grove, similar to that which is around Kyle Field. The Grove will be opened in the spring, at which time an unan nounced, well-known orchestra will be available. All-College Ball Planned For Sept. 21 The first All-College dance of the 1946 fall semester will be held in Sbisa Hall, Saturday night, Sep tember 21, 1946. Admission will be $1.50 with or without a date. Commencing at 9 p. m. the dance will last until 12 p. m. This will be the first dance of this kind since the return of the many war veterans to the campus. Dates will be accommodated in P. G. Hall, which will open at 10 a.m. Saturday and will close at noon Sunday. The fee will be $1.00, including linens and towels. A matron and two maids will be on duty to assist the gilds. Accommo dations for 104 girls are available and students desiring rooms for dates should register at the Place ment Office located in the Admin istration Building. Music for the dance will be furn ished by the newly organized Ag- gieland Orchestra, under the direc tion of Bill Turner. The lineup of the band is as follows: trumpets: J. C. Mayes, Don Simpson, and Glen Torrence; tx'ombones: Jack McGi'egor, Nelson McLain and G. C. Stanley; saxes: Don Hackney, Jerry Steves, Braxton Doak, Glenn Duhon and Edwax-ds. Freddy Nel son will handle piano honors, Fred Forste, guitar; Richard Parker, bass; and Tom Blankenship, drums. Boyd Rogers will handle the vocals this year. 2 Campus Musical Groups to Present Guion HallProgram Aggieland Orchestra, Singing Cadets, and Vocalists On Sept. 21 On Friday, September 20, at 7:15 p. m., two Aggie organizations will be featured on the stage of Guion Hall, it was announced by Bill Tur ner, director of the Singing Ca dets and the Aggieland Orchestra. To be held immediately before the All-College Dance, the program will be free to all persons. The Aggieland Orchestra, new ly organized with several return ing members, will be featured in several instrumeixtal arrangements of both the swing and sweet va- xnety. Three school songs, “The Spirit of Aggieland, Twelfth Man, and I’d Rather Be a Texas Ag gie”, will be sung by the Singing Cadets. Besides these two musical or ganizations, the show will feature the singing of Mixnam Forman, star of the summer production H. M. S. Pinafore, and Boyd Rogers, Aggie singer, whose vocal style won the applause of the Cadet Corps last year on the Jamboree. All Aggies and their wives and residents of College Station are cordially invited to attend this hour’s entertainment. One reason the gentleman of today doesn’t kiss the modern girl’s hand is that he’d burn his nose on her cigarette. We-e-ell, 01’ Army, Who's Got the Spirit? .. College Night Puts Fish on Line Gives Corps Spirit Once Again Last Friday evening on the steps of Goodwin Hall, A & M witness ed its biggest college night since the fall of 1942. To all who were Leader Kobs there, it was an exciting exper ience, from the lowest Fish to the veteran ten-year man. The initial purpose of college night is the introduction of fresh men to Aggieland. Naturally when the 225-piece Aggie Band burst out with the Aggie War Hymn, the new members of the Corps didn’t exactly know what was taking place; but by the time for the ending yell, the Fish appeared to be veering toward “The Line.” The contagious enthusiasm that is so dominant at college nights not only had its effect on the fresh man class but quite a few of the returning veterans again felt those “butterflies” in their stomachs— a feeling that had been absent for several years. Not only was Goodwin Hall dec orated by the Aggie Band, but also long streamers of “Aggie con fetti” came flowing through the air toward the humped fish. Col lege authorities believe that if many more yell practices take place the corps will have to find a sub stitute for “Aggie confetti.” After the introductory yells, the head yell leader, Bill Rosser, in troduced the president of the col lege, Gibb Gilchrist. After rolling up his sleeves, “Prexy” expressed his backing of the team and an nounced that two holidays, one for the Baylor game and one for the SMU game, were in the offing for students this Fall. After “Prexy’s” talk the entire football team was introduced to the corps by assistant coaches Botchy Koch and Marty Karow. Freshmen are expected to know all of the individual football play ers so that they can readily pass their names back on certain yells. All in all, college night this year was more than a success. Not Prexy Speaks only did the newcomer freshman become ecquainted with the corps that is to be a part of their lives for the next four years, but the newly returned veteran met his school friends that he had missed for several years. Cecil, Haws, Huston, and Hamon Will Assist In Class of ’48 Leadership Bill McCormick was elected to lead the Class of ’48 through the 1946-47 school year as Senior Class President Monday night in a meeting held in the Y. M. C. A. Chapel. McCormick, a Dallas mechanical engineering student, has been a member of “B” Co. Infantry since his arrival at A. & M. in 1944. Fish, Here’s Cash For Your Signs! Carrying on with the policy of awarding prizes to the cadet organization presenting the best football caption, Loupot is again making this offer. Prizes totaling $75 will be presented during the current football season. Each week $5 will be presented for the best sign exhibited on the dormitor ies. A bonus prize of $25 will apply to the Turkey Day Game. Dog Dawson Issues Plea For Students Of “Brain-Trust” “Dog” Dawson, Assistant Ath letic Director, has made an urgent plea to all intelligencia to apply for jobs as tutors for the football boys. Students who are good in mathematics, English, and chem- istx’y are especially needed, but there is some need for tutors in all courses. These jobs will pay substantially more than student labor prices, and all the work will have to be done at night, after eight o’clock. Anyone interested in doing this type of work is asked to get a slip from the head of the depart ment in which they would like to instx'uct and take it to “Dog” Daw son, and he will assign students to tlxem. Parking Rules Set For College Autos Every effort is being made by the Campus Security Office to ease the problem of parking both student and employee automobiles on the campus. If all students and employees will park their vehicles properly, use them only when necessary, and enter and leave the campus by the most direct route to and from their respective parking space, the auto mobiles will not be too trouble some, according to Fred Hickman, Chief of Campus Security. Students living in Dorms 1 thru 12 will use the parking lots be hind dorms 11 and 12; in the event these areas are filled, the streets adjacent will be used. Dorms 14 through 17 will use the parking lot behind No. 17 and the lane in the AAA parking lot. Biz- zell, Hart, Legett, Mitchell, Law and Puryear Halls will use the streets xxearest the dormitories. Students in Milner and Walton Halls are requested to use the parking area behind the buildings. Day students with automobiles will use the ax-ea to the rear of the Petroleum Engineering Building and the area south of the old pa rade ground. All drivers are cautioned to ob serve the “No Pax’king” signs, and are asked to refrain from pax-king at walkway entrances. The cooperation of all students is asked by Mr. Hickman in the solving of this problem in the shox-test possible length of time. Results in Plastic Contest Announced Results of a fourth year design problem held last week have been announced by the Department of Architecture. Tying for first place were Jimmie Demopolus of Tex arkana and Harry B. Smith of New Orleans. The problem, a one-day affair held in cooperation with the In dustrial Education Department was to design an object using plastics. Actual objects made of plastics as well as numerous photographs were on display. Objects designed by the Architecture students in cluded trays, beverage sets, coffee tables, and other similar items. A design by Bob Simpson won second place; and Irving Gewertz and Charlie Carleton tied for third. Vice-presidential choice of the seniors is Clyde Cecil, captain of “A” Co. Engineers. Recording sec retary of senior meeting proceed ings and class correspondence is Art Haws, “F” Battery Field Ar tillery captain from LaFeria. Senior class finances will be in the hands of Bob Huston, captain of “A” Co. Chemical Warfare Ser vice from Stamford. Social secre tary in charge of directing senior social activities in the coming year is A. O. Hamon of Gonzales. These officers were elected from among the members of the Class of ’48, the only requirement being that they fulfill the qualifications for a cadet commissioned officer. Following elections, the class engaged in a general discussion of problems facing the Cadet Corps. Veterans Club to Meet Monday Night To Pick Officers « The Ex-Servicemen’s Club will meet Monday, September 23, 1946 at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall. All veterans are urged to attend the meeting. A complete reorganization of the club will be made, and new officers are to be elected as fol lows: President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treas., Parliamentar ian, and Sergeant-at-arms. A new Board of Representatives, which is made up of members elected to represent each veteran dormitory on the campus, will also be elected. The Board of Representatives is the most important committee functioning in the club, and each member should be considered care fully before being elected. Co-editors of the Battalion and Longhorn will also be elected. All veterans who have served in the Army, Navy, Marines, or Coast Guard in World War II are eligible as members of the club. Newman Club to Entertain Tessies The Texas A&M Newman Club met for the first time this semes ter Wednesday evening, September 11 at St. Mary’s Chapel with nearly 150 in attendance. The welcoming and opening ad dress was delivered by Monsignor J. B. Gleisner and a subsequent talk was given by Fr. Tim Valen- ta. Newly elected officers for the club include Herman Neusch, as president, Joe Culinan as vice-pres ident, Bill O’Mara as 'secretary, Dick Plouch as treasurer, and Joe Kavanaugh as historian. Dr. Hil debrand was selected to the posi tion of Faculty Advisor. The next meeting of the New man Club will be Sunday night, September 22 at 6:30 in the As sembly hall, where plans will be discussed for the Newman Club dance on October 5. The club will be host to 350 students of TSCW on that occasion. A further meet ing will be held in St. Mary’s Chapel on Wednesday evening, September 25, at 7:15. Officers Elected For Agronomy Club The Agronomy Society of the A, & M. College met Tuesday night, September 17 and elected officers for the Fall semester of 1946-1947. The meeting was called to or der by acting president George Rivers and he introduced Mr. Rich ard C. Potts, Professor of Agron omy who talked on the history of the Agronomy Society and spoke of its laws and by-laws. Potts spoke also of the annual Cotton Balls held by the Society each Spring and of the educational ac tivities of the club. Newly elected president for the present semester is George Rivers. Bertis L. Richey was elected as vice-president, and Darius B. Mc Combs becomes secretary and treasurer. Verlin L. Bennett as sumes the position of parliamen tarian and John P. Stanford be comes reporter.