4 I r ‘n THE BATTALION Til iTUDtirr puDuciTioii or AfM COIIIG I Cl T(X4% COLLL0L iUTlOH.TtXAS Entered as second class matter at the Post Office . Mire at Collate Station,] “THE AGGIES” TO BE PRESENTED OH APRIL 12 AND 13 The Thumday Nijrht Perform ance Hill Be Exclusively for Students. Campus and Bry an People Invited To At tend Next Night. Wallace Predicts Co Youth Movement As A Result of Crisis l /S _ _ Subscription rate SI TS per year Advertisina rates upon reqdeet. EDITORIAL STAFF Wade M Watson C. A. Toach E. C. Roberta H. G. Seelijfson lack Sloan H. F. Martin P. G. Post Ray Murray J. M. Shepherd A. S. Queen JUNIOR EDITORS T W. Porter M F. Finrke REPORTERS T. M Brown • Manairing S po rts ... Associate .. Associate . ..Associate Edi U Garrar L. tlal K. S- L. C. Smi:l BUSINESS STAFF F. W. Brandis E. L. Hears W. D. Percy ..... C. B. Hussey Tom Meti W. E. Fitzgerald D. M. Emery - Adrartking Ms Assistant Advertising Mar AasisUnt Advertising Circulation Mar Assistant Cirrelation Mar ... Assistant Circulation Mar Assistant Circulation Manaf S. R. Greer Assistant Circulation Manaf Outlaw Hazing Since ten members of the sophomore class were forced to school yesterday as a result of the penalty imposed upon them Executive Committee because of their having i>e«n found guilty. i»f hazing, now is the best time for the entire student body to realize tie necessity of the abolition of hazing from Texas A and M College. The Executive Committee has been the target of much criii- cism since its decision was made known. Most of this criticism is very unjust because those who invoke it never .consider the enact circum stances of the case nor the principle as well. Rather than criticize su^h a decision. We should take it as men and realize that we ourselves the ones to lie blamed for the dismissal of those ten fnen from tl rolls of the college. We have been dealt with fairer than we can ev expect to l>e dealt with in life. The officials have la»en lenient with their penalties, trying to let us take the initiative in cutting out thing that is the greatest thorn in the side of the college, but we hate been the ones who have failed to take the responsibility offered U* And even yet we don't seem to realize that the same thing that hap pened yesterday will continue to happen unless we abolish hazing. Many argue that hazing is a good thing, and that it is a gopd thing for the school. We will admit in certain cksvs that hat ing is a good thing, but it is illegal and if Texas A and M is to K<> forward in the future, hazing must lie removed entirely from u»e campus. This isn’t only because of the .college officials. The taxpayers of the State who make our education possible demand that it be eui ' ~ The members of the Board of Director*, who realize more than any exactly how detrimental hazing is to the college also demand that be stopped. We, as students, can see the individual benefits derived from the use of the board, but we aren't the one* who send sons to A and M, and neither are we the ones whose dollars i(tty for the |n- structjpn that we receive and the buildings ia which w*) live and (e ceive instruction. It is hoped that this article will have as much moaning to tfie freahmen, sophomores, and juniors as well as the seniors, because U will take evary bit of the cooperation of each class to budil up tJfcF name that A and M should have by abolishing hazing. This year ha* shown the greatest improvement of any class in doing away with it, .but-one loae event of this kind tears down the work that the oth**r twenty-five organizations have accomplished during the year. Are students of those organizations wlo have tried to abolish basing- g to stand for one outfit to ruin the entire year's work of all of the 4 »* incredible that this be allowed. , . Why can’t we as students take the lead and extini^utah U thing that has caused studen} feeling to run so high, and the Henry Wendler and “Jems" Wil lard. business managers for the all-student play “The Aggies", an- KMince that a performance will be given the night of Thursday. Ap- ferson College, who wny years the for entering col- Priday night general admission will be twenty-five cents and re serve seats will be priced at thirty- five cents. One man in each or ganization will be designated to sell tickets to the play on or about April 2. “The Aggies", a play that pre sents life on the A and M College campus as it really is. has been so arranged that numerous vaudeville and novelty acts may be included. Each Sunday afternoon at three o'clock vaudeville practices are held in the Asbury room of the library. Already three accordians, five guitars, two banjos, six French harps, ami a whistle have been workesf into a novelty orches tra. T. F. Mayo, author and di rector of the play announced. Be sides music instrumental entertain ment, several tap dancers, a hula dancer, a torch singer, and a dou ble quartette have been embodied in the production. Jack Roach and 4. R Alexander compose one com edy team and “Black Jack” John son and Jimmie Zellers are teamed together to furnish additional laughs to the show. the youth of today to grapple in an adventurous way with the reali ties of the coming day.” W. A Rambo. Gonzalet. captain on the Second Battalion Infantry Staff, recently, received notice that he had passed the ulivsica] examination to enter th^Flging Cadet training station, which' it located at Randolph Field Rambo took the examination at Fort Crockett February 8. He expects to be appointed t* a class that will hegin in July, and which will last fqr eight and a half months. After successfully pass ing this training period he will b* transferred to Kelley Field fo^ further service. Atiftntic attendance racket! Thia was tl made before tl ing of the Ne chers’ Associa Ralph Cooper ington and J> declared that primary moti extrmeurri- * e * e has not t>4*n • desire to seek education but; to profit socially and financiallji. Results, he said, are evident ini “student organisa tions formed and carried on for! graft” and in the number of “gra duate racketeers” found in great numbers in criminal activities. Outlining th^ development of American education. Dr. Hutchi son said: “The college; degree assumed real market vwlue as the trade- grity, scholarship and ult was an unpre cedented rush ^f enrollment and of building expansion, until some of our curricula looked like a depart ment store inventory. Snap courses abounded and insincere student cflftld be graduated without absorb ing education. J ■■The public was bent on sending all its sons through the ssusage grinder and niit with a packer’s trademark. Anyone betraying a primary concern for academic achievement xtas contemptuously dubbed a ‘grih‘1’ xnd the effect was devastsgi campuses unless they offer graft to the student committees.” Much of this may be changed as the result of the depression, but Dr. Hutchison pointed out that .. “graduate racketeers” continue to March fl.—College ^ j nvo | Te j | n corrupt professio- beewne a great ^ p ract j co4 such as defalcations. concealment of corporation facts, startling charge stock watering, peddling of ques- November meet- tionable securities, evasion of in- Jersey State Tea- come taxes, diatribution and ac- President ceptance of bribes, predatory ex- ©f Wash- ploitation of public resources and the widespread system of munici pal graft. He declared that there is a tre mendous demand for able, honest men with training and that stan dards must be revised to make these the ideal of college students, rather than the “racketeers." Rambo Passes Air Corps Examination mark of intei . culture. The Raleigh, N. C.—When college authorities refused to grant their request that Lucy Johnson, chief dietitian, be restored to her posi tion from which she had been dis missed, students at St. Augustine College, Negro higher education institution, went on strike last week. — — SSISAkllLY HALL “BITTftR SWEET” with ANNA NAGLE Jjaturduj 6:30 and 8:00 “AGGIE APPLEBY MAKER OF MEN” .with CHARLES FARRELL AND WYNNE GIBSON Saturday 10:30 ' DINNER AT EIGHT” All-Star Cast f- Wednesday. March 14 Any other student* who can tsp dance or shuffle arc urged by Mr. Mayo to report to him or to come to the vaudeville practice at thf library at three o’clock! Sunday afternoon. of the country with conditions as they exist in other parts of the country has been favorably demonstrated by other schools in this con ference. A and M should enter whole-heartedly into this opportunity to put the College “on the map” so to speak. “Student ^Julies were perform ed for exqtssire pay. Committees conducted college dances for in ordinate profils. There were fal sification of iccounts. misappro priation of fupds. theft Of equip ment and a widespread system of secret commissions. Dance orches- tran still pay the committee select- i ing them. Agpnt* for fraternity jewelry, programs, dance favors and class sweaters maintain that ! they cannot dp business on most j THIS IS AGGIE WEEK > . • BIG S WEEK Save on Small Things at Penney’s i OAI» | (>CK* l.’Sl’KN Df.RS HORTS |HIRTS I LACKS I i . f’KKADS i HAVING CHRAM HOBS iHOK STRIM.S 'having LOTION* - At Penney’s Saving Prices \ ji i > i J.C. PENNEY COMPANY, INC. , iJi.Ufl . r:\ : ;t ^ ■.iHimMfmr — BRYAN. 4.*!! .(* band to the Temple game. Such an opfar and Ua A and M College must not be overlooked. THa value of sectional, games in establishing closer relstions between widely ^ a tad institutions of the nation and in acquainting people in all n ua c.:»«r y n-H* ; -VS 'ril po; •»» »kfT 4* T* tri:r ifri AM .. 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