Page 2 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Friday, October 25, 1963 ’Dutchman On The Brazos 9 CADET SLOUCH by nm Earie Warm A&M Story “ . . . See, if we all take sacks to yell practice and th’ guy next to us gets rowdy—wham!” BATTALION EDITORIALS Ferreri’s Triangle Restaurant Friday’s Featuring Our FISH SPECIAL All the fish you can eat for $1.00 at 12:00 noon and from 5:00 p. m. to 8:00 p. m. Book Your Banquets and Special Parties Early. Accomodations From 10 to 200 Persons THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalion is a non tax-supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and operated by students as a university and community news paper and is under the supervision of the director of Stu dent Publications at Texas A&M University. Board are James L. Lindsey, chairman ; Delbert J. A. Qrr, College of Engineering; J. M. D. McMurry, College of Veterinary Medicine. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A®M is published in College Sta tion, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods. Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. se for republication of all news the paper and local news of republication of all other matter here- spontaneo in are als so reserv n : fed. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Assii. Represented nationally by t i o n a 1 advertisi: ice, I City, Chicago, Los An- N a t i Servic tlsing York n a Inc., New hicago, Lo! geles and San Francisco. are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school y tax. Advertising rat< ect to 2% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request, ion. Room 4, YMCA Building; College Static] ear, $6.50 per full year. * irnished < n, Texas. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the editorial office. Room 4, YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. DAN LOUIS JR EDITOR Ronnie Fann - Managing Editor Glenn Dromgoole News Editor Jim Butler Sports Editor John Wright Asst. News Editor Marvin Schultz Asst. Sports Editor Juan Tijerina - - Photographer By DAN LOUIS JR. Battalion Editor Good books come from the most un expected places sometimes. Such is the case of a recent publication called “Dutchman On The Brazos” written by Caesar Hohn, who would come closer to being identified if referred to as Dutch Hohn. Dutch is remembered by Aggies, young and old alike, as one of the first great grid iron heroes of Texas A&M. However, count less hundred, and probably even thousands, remember Dutch Hohn for his social accom plishments in the great state of Texas. “Dutchman On The Brazos” is the story of Dutch’s life. It is written as his life has been lived, centering around Texas A&M. The story of a boy who came from a immigrant German family, who never “even had a date, a dance, or nice soft conversation HOHN with a girl” until he was 18 years old, who came to A&M to evade the tactics of a marriage minded young lady and then became one of A&M’s finest graduates, can be told only as Dutch has told it—in the same language and tone. Dutch recalls his pleasures of working with farms and soil rehabilitation and people after receiving his M.A. degree from A&M. Working as ranch manager and later as county agent, Dutch tells how he worked with hardheaded farmers and persuaded them that the “foolishness” of terracing their land would save their soil. The discussions of A&M, Hohn’s day at A&M and his efforts to help worthy boys help themselves through A&M are expressed in a manner that is almost affectionate. A Real Fresher Upper Off and running! The Campus Chest drive has a running start at its goal of $5,000, but it’s going to be a long run. The students of A&M should pick up the $5,000 goal as a challenge. After all, even though the goal has been set by the student welfare committee of the Student Senate, the campaign itself is a function of the entire student body. There is no reason why the goal should not be reached and passed by the end of next week. While all of us on campus like to think that we really have to watch the pocket to make ends meet, there is hardly a week goes by that each of us doesn’t squander away $1 or more. The $5,000 goal that has been set for this year is probably spent many times each week for cigarettes alone on campus. There is no way to measure how many times this goal could be met with one week’s coffee money. A dollar to help an individual in need, especially a fellow Aggie, MONDAY Aluminum Company of Ameri ca — Chemical engineering, elec trical engineering, industrial en gineering and mechanical engi neering. Amerada Petroleum Corpora tion — Petroleum engineering. Ernst and Ernst — Accounting and industrial engineering. Foley’s — Accounting, agricul tural economics, business admin istration, economics and indus trial engineering. Monsanto Chemical Company — Engineering, electrical engi neering, mechanical engineering, petroleum engineering and chem istry. Touche, Ross Bailey and Smart — Accounting. United Gas Corporation — Chemical engineering, electrical engineering, mechanical engineer ing, mathematics and physics. U. S. Department of Agricul ture — Chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, chemis try and physics. Welex — Electrical engineer ing, mechanical engineering, in dustrial education and industrial technology. Bulletin Board FRIDAY The Pan American Club will meet in Room 3-B of the Mem orial Student Center at 7:30 p.m. The Baha’i World Faith In formative Fireside will be held in Room 101 of the YMCA Build ing. Outfit pictures for the AG- GIELAND will be made accord ing to the schedule below. Uniform will be class A Winter. Outfit C.O.’s will wear sabers; seniors will wear boots. Ike jackets may be worn if ALL seniors in the outfit can obtain them. Guidons and award flags will be carried. ALL personnel in the outfit will wear the billed service cap issued by the college. The type of cap worn by under classmen to and from the pic ture taking area is left to the discretion of the outfit C.O. Outfits should be in front of the Administration Building by 1230 hrs. on the appointed day. Arrangements should be made by first sergeants with the Mess Hall supervisors to allow the outfit to be admitted to the Mess Hall early. October 21 A-l, B-l October 22 C-l, D-l October 23 E-l, F-l October 24 G-l, G-2 October 25 A-2, B-2 October 28 C-2, D-2 October 29 E-2, F-2 October 30 A-3, B-3 October 31 C-3, D-3 November 1 E-3, F-3 November 4 H-3, Sqd. 16 November 5 G-3, 1-3 November 6 Sqd. 1, Sqd. 2 November 7 Sqd. 3, Sqd. 4 November 8 Sqd. 5, Sqd. 6 November 11 Sqd. 7, Sqd. 8 November 12 Sqd. 9, Sqd. 10 November 13 .... Sqd. 11, Sqd. 12 November 14 .... Sqd. 13, Sqd. 14 November 18 .... Sqd. 15, Sqd. 17 November 19 M-Band, W-Band Job Calls TUESDAY Buffalo Forge Company — In dustrial engineering and mechan ical engineering. Continental Oil Company — Civil engineering, electrical engi neering, industrial engineering, geological engineering, geophy sics, mechanical engineering, pet roleum engineering and physics. Edgerton, Germeshausen and Grier, Inc. — Electrical engineer ing, nuclear engineering, com puter science, mathematics and physics. Monsanto Chemical Company — Chemical engineering, electri cal engineering, mechanical en gineering, petroleum engineering and chemistry. Sunray DX Oil Company — Chemical engineering, chemistry, electrical engineering, industrial engineering, mechanical engineer ing and petroleum engineering. Touche, Ross, Bailey and Smart — Accounting. Winter Caps Now Available It will soon be time for winter uniforms. Why wait for the rush? Buy your winter caps the next time you are at the North Gate. Then you’ll be all set when winter uniforms become the uniform of the day. LOUPOT'S 6,000 Aggies Can’t Be Wrong At The North Gate VI 6-6312 ALL DAnCe Enjoy an evening with “The Silvertones” SATURDAY, OCT. 26 after the game 8-12 p. m. MSC LOWER LEVEL Tickets on sale at the door Admission: $2.00 Per Couple—No Stags Sound Off One part of the book which would prob ably be of interest to all Aggies is where Dutch discusses a trying experience under Coach Charley Moran. Moran had Hohn scrimmaging across from a man who had three years experience and 60 pounds ad vantage on him. Hohn writes, “That combination should have been more than enough to subdue me, except for one thing—I had the spirit. “I would like to pause here and dissect this thing called ‘spirit.’ I am sure it is something that springs from different wells in different people. One would have to know a lot more about Moran’s childhood and his ancestry than I do to tell you what were the ingredients of his spirit. I only know about my own. I had good health, a strong consti tution, and a burning desire to identify my self, to earn the respect of my fellow stu dents. I was never altogether sure of myself or of how I would measure up when the crucial test came, but I was determined not to be found wanting. This, I suspect, was the reason why I threw the chunk of liver at a classmate in lab and risked expulsion from the college; and as a result of this same drive I entered, and won, from a fumbling start, the College oratorical contest two years —though frankly the competition here was none too keen. But perhaps the major ele ments of my spirit was that I liked rough bodily contact, specially with a fellow I en vied—as I did all upperclassmen, or anybody who was better off than I was, and in those days it seemed to me that in most ways everybody was better off than I was. And, lastly, I wanted to be a part of the group that wanted to win. I was like the para trooper General Max Taylor tells about. When the general asked him whether he liked to jump, he said, ‘No, sir, but I like to be with people who like to jump’.” Editor, The Battalion: After Tuesday’s meeting with Col. Baker, we were vastly en lightened and proud to know that a man of such high calibre is Commandant of the Corps of Cadets. We now better understand his position as well as that of the school. It is up to the mem- Winner’sTalk Called Down WASHINGTON ) — The National Academy of Sciences gave Nobel Prize winner Linus Pauling a rap on the knuckles Wednesday for using its centen nial meeting as a platform for criticizing the nation’s man-to- the-moon program. Pauling was called into con ference with academy president Frederick Seitz. Afterward he told newsmen he would make no further statements on the moon project now but would do so in detail after he returns to Cal ifornia. He said Seitz had told him the academy’s centennial “is a birth day party and not a forum for a political discussion.” Suits OFF $20 00 A&M MEN’S SHOP Home of distinctive men’s wear North Gate FRIDAY “HARRY BLACK AND THE TIGER” I ^ I— Bru.m NOW SHOWING Features 1:00 - 3:39 - 6:18 - 9:00 riaCK SHIRLEY LEMMON MaeUUNE BIIIY WIIDER’S ] RMa ia DOUCE TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION* QUEEN DOUBLE FEATURE Jerry Lewis In “NUTTY PROFESSOR” & Jeff Chandler In “ J A YHA WKERS” hers of the Corps of Cadets as to the role which they will play in the future of Texas A&M. We are proud to be members of the largest and best military university in the world. Class of ’65 Company 1-3 ALL MILITARY STAFFS YEARBOOK PORTRAIT SCHEDULE All men in the Corps on any Staff, BOTH JUNIORS AND SENIORS, will have their por trait made for the “Aggieland ’64” at the Aggieland Studio, North Gate, according to the following schedule. Unifonm will be Class A Win ter: without cap for the class section, and WITH GH CAP for the military section. COMMANDING OFFICERS will have portraits made full length in boots for the military section, and SHOULD MAKE INDIVIDUAL APPOINT. MENTS WITH THE STUDIO FOR THESE FULL LENGTH PORTRAITS. OCT. 28-29 Corps staff, 1st Bri gade, 1st & 2nd. Bn. Staffs 29- 30 2nd Brigade, 3rd & 4th Bn. Staffs 30- 31 3rd Brigade, 5th & 6th Bn. Staffs OCT. NOV. 1 1st Wing, 1st & 2nd Group Staffs 4-5 2nd. Wing 3rd & 4th Group Staffs, Comb. Band Staff NOW SHOWING FEATURES 1:00 - 3:44 - 6:28 - 9:15 55 DAYS THAT STUNNED THE WORLD.... The Pinnacle of Motion Picture Excitement! CIRCLE TONIGHT 1st Show 6:30 p.m. Ann Margarette In “BYE-RYE BIRDIE” & Paul Newman In “YOUNG PHILADELPHIANS” JOIN THE GANG AT OUR AFTER THE GAME ALL NIGHT MOVIE RAMA 7 BIG SHOWS FROM 6:30 TO 6 A. M. No. 1 “APRIL LOVE” No. 2 “TIME MACHINE” No. 3 “APACHE” No. 4 “ 4 D MAN” No. 5 “NAKED & THE DEAD” No. 6 “THE FLY” No. 7 “LIVE FAST-DIE YOUNG” PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz THER£lI Pl&'ED IT ALL THE UAV THR0U6H (JlTHOCT A SIN6LE MISTAKE'