fHE BATTALION sss THE BATTALION Published every Wednesday nisrht by the Students’ Association of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Subscription price *1.76 per Tear. ALL ADS RUN UNTIL ORDERED OUT. Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in section 1103, Act of October 8, 1917, authorized October 18, 1922. All undergraduates in the College are eligible to try for a place on the Editorial Etaff of this paper. Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors who are interested in journalism for its own sake, are urged to make themselves known to some member of the Stag. EDITORIAL STAFF L. J. FRANKE Editor 6. L STRATTON. JR Managing Editor R. H. JONES Associate Editor L. H. MADDOX Associate Editor K. O. PEARSON Associate Editor S. BAKER Associate Editor A. R. MENGER Sports Editor C. M. FLORER Associate Sports Editor T. A. P1LKEX Assistant Sports Editor R. E. HOM ANN Exchange Editor W. G. RALPH Social Editor R. T. FALKENBERG News Editor W. C. MORRIS Associate News Editor G. M. WJRENN Assistant News Editor W. T. COLEMAN Associate News Editor G. F. STARK Literary Editor R. B. TATE Literary Editor N. A. DONGES Literary Editor W. C. JOHNSON Associate Literary Editor R. C. HAYNIE Humorous Editor W. D. McELROY Humorous Editor L L. TAYLOR Cartoonist BUSINESS MANAGER R. L. EDGAR Business Manager J. A. DAVIS Assistant Business Manager R. E. O. SLOAN Circulation Manager THE INTERSCHOLASTIC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT A. & M.’s opportunity of holding the Texas Interscholastic Basketball Tournament here has given great pleasure to many of her supporters who have watched with a jealous eye the monoply the University has exercised for many years in the affairs of the Interscholastic League. It seems but' Lair that Texas’ two great state institutions should share the honor of. entertaining the state’s high school atheletes. Now at last Aggieland has the opportunity of seeing the high schools of the state battle for the state championship on the floor of the Memorial Gymnasium. The only fly in the oinment is that the expenses of staging the? tournament will be roughly two thousand dollars. The Athletic Department believes that if it will contribute five hundred of this amount, the student body, when it understands the situation, will buy enough tickets to the game to make up the fifteen hundred dollar guarantee that is necessaryl to partially defray the railroad expenses of the visiting athletes. The Battalion seconds this belief. In the first place, every A. & M. student is eager to have the high! school representatives visit Aggieland, and{ everyone realizes in addition that the games will be worth seeing. Further more, there will be a few students who will not be “pulling” for some team to win, and consequently will want to see that team play. Therefore, when your company commander asks you to pledge your financial support, remember that you are doing your college a service and yourself a favor, and sign on the dotted line the seniors. And when an entrance has been designated as belonging to the underclassmen, the campus people, etc., the “Y” employee at that en trance should be firm enough to refuse passage to anyone not entitled to use that door. At the last few shows, sophomores and freshmen were in the majority in the senior section. The “Y” should have men ushering in this section who woould not allow anyone in the center section except those entitled to sit there. It is to be hoped that the Y. M. C. A. will take notice of these sug 1 - gestions, and devise some method of relieving the situation. Certainly it is clear to everyone that the system of managing the details of the shows are not all it could be. In this connection, it might be said that the very men who complained about the management of the shows, when questioned, all declared them selves well satisfied with the type of entertainment offered by the “Y.” Several recalled the days when every show brought forth complaints, and asserted that now they heard nothing but expressions of satisfaction where the “Y’s” choice of pictures was concerned. REPLY TO “COLLEGE LIFE AT A. & M.’ SUGGESTIONS TO THE Y. M. C. A. The Battalion has been approached by several students with the de mand that it make some suggestions on the management of the picture shows to the Y. M. C. A. A little canvassing among various organizations on the campus revealed that practically everyone approved of these sug gestions, and The Battalion therefore feels empowered to call the attention of the Y. M. C. A. to the following measures, which are believed will re lieve the situation. At each show, and especially on Wednesday nights, a congestion oc curs at the doors of the Assembly Hall that is irksome and distasteful to everyone. Naturally this condition would result when some 1500 cadets, as well as a number of campus people, purchase tickets to the show at one time. When, after fifteen minutes of shoving and pushing, the ticket has been obtained, the interior of the Assembly Hall has been darkened so that it is difficult to find a desirable seat, and the picture is well on its way. The remedy to this situation seems to lie in two moves. The first of these is opening the doors of the Assembly Hall sooner, thus lengthening the period of time for the crowd to enter and be seated. The objection to this, of course, is that those who enter first will become impatient and unruly; yet The Battalion believes that if the show started strictly ac cording to schedule, and if the cadets realized that this move was made for their convenience, they would refrain from any demonstrations. The second direction of improvement would be the offering for sale of tickets at the “Y” desk during Wednesday afternoons. Many students would buy their tickets before going to the show, and since the “Y” keeps a man at the desk in any case, this move could be instituted with little trouble except, possibly, of adopting a more distinctive ticket. Some time ago, the announcement was made that underclassmen would enter the Assembly Hall through pne entrance, the seniors through an other. This rule, while a good one, was never enforced, even from the be- ! ginning. A door should be designated by which seniors and campus people should enter; certainly this move would meet with the approval of the latter group, for now these people never have an opportunity of entering the show until the cadets have forced their way through the doors. There is no doubt that the campus family would receive more consideration at the hands of 1 What we should do with our leisure time seems to be a subject of considerable weight with the author of the editorial on “College Life at A. & M.” in last week’s issue of The Battalion, and strange to say, he has 1 voiced the opinion of more than a Tew of our fellow Aggies. Justa what can we do to pass away the many spare hours that some of us are lucky enough to h)ave? Isn’t that a hard question to answer? For one thing, we didn’t come to college with the prime motive of passing away thej time and trying to find something to do, or at least the college was not intended for people who find themselves in that position. Practically all of the courses in the curriculum of the college are difficult enough to require a great amount of the student’s time should he desire to learn, the fundamental and general principles of that course. A brief survey of the grades received by the average student shows that he is not doing justice to his studies. The thing for such a man to do is to use that big surplus of time in improvement of grades and learning something which he came tq college to get. Then, after the lessons have been prepared and experimentts completed, should there still be any spare time, the library is open tq every student and contains thousands of volumes well worth reading. A college is supposed to develop a cultured class of men as well as a trained group of workers. Which is the most cultural, an afternoon in the library or an afternooni with some girl? Those who are dissatisfied with the amusements of A. & M. (are the very one’s who never frequent good books. Th|e fellow whot is seeking an education and the maximum benefit for the time spent in school is never wanting for something to do. Of course, there should always be some break from the montony of study, and that is capably furnished by the college system of recreation. For those athletically inclined, the gymnasium its resources. The only desirable sport that is limited is tennis, and that has many substitutes. The intramural sports ! program is intended to encourage boys to take part in various competitive games—,and still there are a great number of men who remain, in their rooms and “gripe” for something to do. For those who require a social means of distraction, there are any number of girls in Bryan and nearby towns—just as nice girls as there are in “the home town”— who have many dateless nights. If a fellow stays in his room and gripes for a date, he Was no one but himself to blame—he should at 'least stand outside and give the girls a chance. Ater all, if a fellow will consider seriously this matter of leisure time, he will find that he alone is to blame if it passed unpleasantly by. Thej student who can’t find enough ito do at A. & M. either knows too much tq be a student here or is not interested in obtaining the education that this institution was initially intended to offer. THE EXCHANGE STORE Welcomes all Old Boys Back to Aggieland and Extends the ; | Freshmen a Cordial Welcome THE EXCHANGE STORE IS YOUR STORE Everything New and Modern THE NEW YORK CAFE THE BEST PLACE TO EAT IN BRYAN PHONE 460