The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 05, 1922, Image 4

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    4
THE BATTALION
THE BATTALION
Published every Friday night by the Students’ Association of the Agri
cultural and Mechanical College of Texas.
Subscription Price $1.50 per Year.
Member Texas Collegiate Press Association.
ALL ADS RUN UNTIL ORDERED OUT.
EDITORIAL STAFF.
P. C. FRANKE, JR
R. E. BRIDGES
J. R. STRANGE
A. P. LANCASTER
M. P. MIMS
M. B. GARDNER
L. C. JINKS
H. L. TUCKER
L. STALLINGS
H. L. ATKINS .
C. W. HURLEY
T. R. STRANGE
J. C. MAYFIELD
Editor-in-Chief
Associate Editor
Assistant Editor
Assistant Editor
News Editor
Sport Editor
Associate Sport Editor
Social Editor
Exchange Editor
. . . Contributing Editor
. . . . Contributing Editor
. . . Contributing Editor
. . .Contributing Editor
BUSINESS STAFF.
W. C. MITCHELL Business Manager
W. H. WILLIAMS Assistant Business Manager
E. J. HOWELL Circulation Manager
ADVERTISING RATES.
Less than 7 column inches at $ .35
From 7 to 20 inches at 30
Above 20 column inches at 25
1 inch cards, regular, per month 2.00
Readers, per line 10
Entered as second-class matter at College Station, Texas, February 17, 1905.
LEST WE FORGET.
Three years ago today, six continents welcomed the coming of peace;
thousands of American homes thanked God for relief from fear; and Presi
dent Wilson, on the full side of triumph of ideals, made ready to carry a
New Gospel into Old Europe. But there was another side to the picture, for
all things are bought with a price, and thousands of American boys had
it. They were not forgotten then. We thought of them in those days with
the warmth of recent loss. We had seen them such a little time before at
school or in training camp. No, they would never be forgotten. America
would cling to their memory as a great national treasure. The rest of us,
who had not been called on for the same sacrifice, felt that the least we could
do was to take up the torch which had dropped from their dead hands and
serve the country in peace in some degree as they had served it in time of
war.
r p«sdpyvvthck slaves are smooth and green in France, and perhaps the, ,,
names bheln^ hTlt^emppatses are growing a little dim. The mighty glow of
hope that filled and warmed the world then is dim too. The nations saw the
promised land of perpetual peace, but this generation was not found worthy
to possess it, and for forty years more we must wander in the wilderness.
Only the memory of how near we once were to a* new World Order remains
to cheer us a little and to point out the line of march, and the memory is
growing fainter every year.
Can it be that the memory of the men who died in France is growing
fainter also ? As classes come and go at A. and M., and a wider space of
time opens between their college days and ours, are we coming to think of
them but rarely, and then as of mere shadows in the past, unreal and mean
ing to us less and less ?
This must not be. Our Campus, our athletic field, our class-rooms,
were the scene of their work and their play. They and we have fought the
same fights, played the same games, given the same yells, and perhaps, sin
ned the same sins. They are a part of us, for their influence and their little
daily doings helped to form the school spirit which is forming us. We will
not forget them. We will leave as a pledge our remembrance and our af
fection, a better, cleaner, and broader college life in the school they loved.
Perhaps it may be given to some of us also to carry on their greater work;
and as the victory for which they paid made possible the continuance of the
great American experiment in Freedom, we may in some measure help to
make that experiment a success.
OUR TEAM.
Do you appreciate the football team which turned a seeming defeat
into a fourteen to three victory in one of the most sensational battles ever
staged in the Southwest—the team which swept Arizona, Oklahoma A. and
M., S. M'. U., and a multitude of others before them in their forward march
to the Southwestern Championship ? Do you realize the strenuous life that
these men are living in working till after dark every day on the football
field and bringing up their scholastic work at the same time? They are not
doing this for themselves alone. They are doing it for you and for A. and
M. Anyone can attend the games and yell for the team, but we should show
our appreciation in a more material way. The Thanksgiving Hop is given
each year in honor of the team, to show them, as best we can, that we ap
preciate their efforts in our behalf to the fullest extent. Each man should
consider it his privilege to contribute all he can to the success of this oc
casion. This dance will cost approximately a thousand dollars, and every
man in the student body will be asked to contribute one dollar each to make
up this sum. Who would not be willing to pay a dollar for the honor which
is bestowed upon you, as an A. and M. man, by the brilliant work of our
football team ? The affair cannot be made too elaborate to counterbalance
the deserts of the men we are honoring. So when your first sergeant wants
your dollar, pay him in the spirit that you are glad to do it—it’s your sa
lute to the football team.
BEAR WITH US.
The “Bat” is your paper. To be a successful publication its articles
must meet with the approval of the majority of its readers. To be an
ideal publication its articles must meet with the approval of all its read
ers. No newspaper, magazine, booklet, or sheet is ideal. The reason for
this is obvious. Every question has two sides, each statement many
angled critisms and whatever viewpoint the writer takes is sure to meet
opposition somewhere. The Bat’s position is even more delicate. There
are seventeen hundred different type’s of literary tastes to pacify among*
the corps, then the faculty and general public must be satisfied.
Every week some articles that have been turned in fail to appear in
print. It isn’t that they always lack sufficient merit; in fact, some show
excellent thought. The point to be considered is what proportion of the
readers will be interested in the article. It is natural that the writer would
think that everybody would read it. He would probably suffer a little dis-
allusionment should he question the first ten men that he chanced to meet
on the Military Walk as to whether or not they thought the article praise
worthy.
The staff has malice toward no student, organization, or department
of the college. It wants to give the cooperation of the columns of the Bat
to everyone. If a contribution of yours fails to be published or appears in
a revised form, think it over before you begin throwing mud at the editor.
The staff’s mission is to please everybody—not you.
For First Glass Work
SEE
CHAS. NITCH
THE CAMPUS TAILOR
CLEANING—PRESSING—REPAIRING
Suits Made to Order. The
Same Old Stand
O * '
Good Things
To Eat and
Drink <, 0
A Complete Line of
Tobacco
rr—
CASEY’S
CONFECTION ER Y
IN THE “Y” BUILDING