tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post5751772148785981378..comments2023-10-09T11:18:01.822-05:00Comments on LazyMF: Texas A&M - The Good, The Bad and The UglyLazyMFhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365586850471167529noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-83620719463588599852018-11-23T06:04:53.641-06:002018-11-23T06:04:53.641-06:00Outstanding postOutstanding postOn the supplementshttp://onthegosupplments.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-91702963857569400772016-11-25T19:05:05.538-06:002016-11-25T19:05:05.538-06:00I was a student at a&m in the early 80s. The s...I was a student at a&m in the early 80s. The student catalog made mention of the library's KKK collection. The campus was still almost all white.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-9690187245785865142016-09-16T17:50:57.620-05:002016-09-16T17:50:57.620-05:00I am a current student at Texas A&M University...I am a current student at Texas A&M University and I actually spent the afternoon in Cushing Library looking at yearbooks, archives, and historic collections for a research paper. I am a white female and I am a proud Ag, but I have to admit that, for a time, Texas A&M was essentially run by the KKK. The football team's financial success and mass popularity across the state of Texas and with alumni world-wide can be largely attributed to contributions and support from the Klan. The Klan robes of head football coach Dana X. Bible are in the archives in Cushing Library. I know because I held them in my hands less than 6 hours ago. I don't know if the information provided here about to on-campus "KKK" club is valid (and I doubt it is, seeing as so many Ags have found evidence that these young men were seeking degrees specific to the title of the club), but I can definitively say that there were KKK meetings held regularly on campus for many years and that there are still monthly KKK meetings held right outside of College Station to this day. This is not a part of Texas A&M history that any of us Aggies are proud of, but we can't deny that our beloved university was once (and still is) entrenched in racial discrimination and all that comes with it.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-32942256727044217982015-02-14T11:08:04.433-06:002015-02-14T11:08:04.433-06:00Just to continue the same thought about the Kream ...Just to continue the same thought about the Kream and Kow Klub, I have looked up at random several members of the club in the 1943 and the 1948 yearbooks. All of the individuals I looked up were majoring in Dairy Science or Dairy Husbandry. In short, what you have uncovered is a club for people who want to be dairy farmers and cattle ranchers. In fact, in looking at the 1948 annual, only one member of the KKK is in uniform; all the other members are in civilian clothes, because they are veterans returning from the war, as my father did, and thus not subject to the required military training. Do you really think that these veterans of the Pacific and Europe had nothing better to do than to join the KKK on their return to the states?!? How ridiculous. Now, it is entirely possible that when this club war formed in the early part of the 20th century, some prankish, immature students chose as its name some words with a scandalous allusion. Today they might have named the club Farmers Union Cattle Klub (note the initials). The name of the club is a poor attempt at humor, and nothing more. The latter half of this blog should be removed; I would think that the university, the members of the club still alive, and their descendants would have a good case for libel.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-66188307254370423512015-02-14T10:49:00.341-06:002015-02-14T10:49:00.341-06:00W. Frank Ellis, nicknamed "Turk," from T...W. Frank Ellis, nicknamed "Turk," from Terrell and majoring in Chemical Engineering, is indeed in the '43 yearbook on p. 85.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-33495555518995561172015-02-14T09:06:37.913-06:002015-02-14T09:06:37.913-06:00The part about the KKK is not true. My father att...The part about the KKK is not true. My father attended A&M in the 40s, and in fact, I have this same yearbook. If you will look up the names of the students in this club, you will discover that they are all majoring in Dairy Science or Animal Science or some such subject. These young men are certainly NOT members of the KKK, nor were the ones dressed in robes. If you look at photos from the University of Texas yearbook from the same period, students dress in blackface. In both the A&M and the Texas yearbooks, you find young men dressed in drag. I do not believe that proves that these men were part of a public QLBT club. In short, these are young men doing funny things for the yearbook.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-91677159033354482912015-02-14T04:09:08.426-06:002015-02-14T04:09:08.426-06:00Oh my lord I think this is my Grandfather's ye...Oh my lord I think this is my Grandfather's yearbook. If you have this, can you please find William Frank Ellis, Captain? Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-15935939221658908382012-07-26T16:33:53.503-05:002012-07-26T16:33:53.503-05:00The William Harrell that you have pictured is not ...The William Harrell that you have pictured is not the William G. Harrell who is the Medal of Honor recipient for Texas A&M. While SSgt William George Harrell was in the class of 1943, he had to leave after only four semesters at A&M to earn money for school. With the outbreak of WWII, he enlisted in the Marine Corps on July 3, 1942. The Fifth Marine Division landed on Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-79829561094582585682011-07-26T19:17:32.369-05:002011-07-26T19:17:32.369-05:00Thanks for the information it really helped me und...Thanks for the information it really helped me understand the school moreAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4522700873778924875.post-73584042361629311832011-05-10T19:05:01.147-05:002011-05-10T19:05:01.147-05:00That is absolutely terrifying. I wish I could say...That is absolutely terrifying. I wish I could say "shocking," but I guess it really isn't, given the context. Still...thanks for the education.Rosemaryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10223441754197927551noreply@blogger.com