Neutral Organ Arranges Pro and Con Discussions in Chapel on Subject of War Justification

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Neutral Organ Arranges Pro and Con Discussions in Chapel on Subject of War Justification Bates College SCARAB The aB tes Student Archives and Special Collections 5-3-1933 The aB tes Student - volume 61 number 03 - May 3, 1933 Bates College Follow this and additional works at: http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student Recommended Citation Bates College, "The aB tes Student - volume 61 number 03 - May 3, 1933" (1933). The Bates Student. 553. http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student/553 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives and Special Collections at SCARAB. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aB tes Student by an authorized administrator of SCARAB. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1 Only Through Moral Suasion and Appeal To Men's Reason Can a Movement Succeed — Samual Qompers FOUNDED POLITICS CLUB IN 1873 MEETING AT 7 P. M. PRICE TEN CENTS VOL. LXI No. 3 Li:\YIKTON, MAINE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1933 «17„ ~* FROM STUDENT STARTS DRIVE TO NEUTRAL ORGAN ARRANGES PRO gist THE CtDM PERMIT SUNDAY TENNIS AND NEWS AND CON DISCUSSIONS IN CHAPEL INE BASEBALL ON CAMPUS SOON Half Of Georgia's Schools Closed Weekly Requests Meeting Between Faculty And ON SUBJECT OF WAR JUSTIFICATION Chicago Teacher Unpaid Undergraduate Leaders To Determine Ad- 'a. BigM Mouths, Kills Self visability Of Sports This Sunday Student Opinion World Over Student Program Russia Grows Discussions On Sharp With Japan LEADERS APPROVE SIMMONS TEACHER Takes On Pacifist Attitude my Sectarian Colleges Wane PLAN UNANIMOUSLY TO SPEAK AT RAND isarmament o In Chapel On I'aderewski Says Move Is Outgrowth Of Through Dean Clark comes Sk.v-Scrapers "Spoil" City lii'- announcement of a s|>oakcr, By Gordon K. Jones Monday Morning Successful Sunday Friday evening. May 5, who al- Start To-night ^ Asks For Xon-Proflt Homes Skating Drive though probably of most interest "I will never fight," said an aged ami much resprrt- to tlie senior girls is open to professor of Yale 1'niversity before tile Xttpivme Court i j Both Students And Fac- Is Education Worth It? members of all 'classes. Miss Politics Club In Charge ed Inquiring Reporter, Page. 5 applied for citizenship papers in this country. Yon shall ulty To Take ents College Sentiment On Beer Ruth Barhelder from Simmons Of Meeting In Lib- lie ., College, the Prince School of not"be tin American Citizen." was the tenor of the Court's Part The Rates Student in its issue Store Service Education, will be reply at this refusal to bear arms. This event aroused a ffi THOMAS MUSGRAVE J8£ by Forum to-day requests a meeting botWOQD a guest at dinner and imme- Btorm over the entire hreaJth of this country, and the tpies- the faculty committee on athletics STUDENT TO HOLD diately afterwards will speak in STUDENT BODY IS ;is to how many born citizens in a nation w 'd ONLY the loyalty and patience and a group of student leaders to the Rand R.voption room on the lion arose DISARMAMENT POLL of teachers has kept the pub- detirmine the advisability of allow- subject "Opportunities for Col- INVITED TO ATTEND make the same declaration. The answer eome from England lic school system of Georgia ing Sunday s|K>rts on campus be- lege Graduates in the Depart- when over 700 students before the.Oxford I'nion resolved ginning this week-end. Neutral from complete collapse says the De- ment Store". The rest of tin- Resolved, Not To Fight For that under no circumstances would they bear arms for king Paper Will Remain Ne partment of Education. Already the The request is the result of the evening, MLss Baclielder will ami country. Student opinion all over the world has defini- Dental schools In 76 of the In9 counties Agency In Con- unanimous opinion rendered by hold penonal conferences for IT. S. In Time Of War, tely taken a pacifist altitude. At the last lUmuainent con- tensive are closed! Only a gasoline tax nearly 40 stud nts quizzed by the those who are interested in this troversv health keeps the remainder open. Loans, Student's Inquiring Reporter, Al- brunch of business. The Prince Is Question ferentee a Yale student bow petitions signed by over seven ng in- which are frequently resorted to, though the canvass covered the • School, a part of Simmons i 'al- thousand students and actually made a plea for our very •V series of unique chapel services elation Bales College students are to join .niinlv new to the Bates campus, are, even when distributed, of no heads of all the major organizations lege, is a graduate .school which in a discussion, international In lives. Last month at Brown University petit,mis were cir- alth. help to the teachers. The ones, who on campus and many other under- prepares women for department are to'be inaugurated next we** MOpe, namely th<> question as to culated on campus declaring that the undersigned would not through the co-operation of the are not boarding with farmers, are graduates whose opinion has be; n store work of all kinds. An invi- whether or not n |M-rson should go living in the schoolhouses, cooking r(.:pected in the past, there was not tation to hear Miss Bnchel.ler, bear arms, unless the soil of the United States wee actually Holes Student, Y.M.U.A., Men's to war if his country is embroiled Politics Club, and members of the • Dean, their meager meals in the domestic a single dissenting vote. Because the who has been highly recom- In a s'.niggle with foreign forces. invadeU. It is nadily seen that in the colleges a veritable •■ Mm. science rooms. They give slips to feeling was so pronounced, it was mended by a prominent trustee, college faculty. In IhMe services this The Men's Politics Club will pro- war against war is under way. proposition, "I believe that war Is the merchants for food arid when deemed expedient to place the mat- is extended to all women. vide the ini|>etus lor the discussion As the Boston Heral » points out. the a -turn o! the Bri- money is available, the merchants' onlv iustilte-l in case of Invasion of ter before the student body editor- on this campus. tish University's students in its radical stand, aroused a wave the mainland of the United States slips are honored first, so the teach- ially. Tonight at seven o'clock in Room selection ol er, accustomed to working without of protest among the newspapers of the nat'on. Talk of by a hostile power", is to be dis- The committee proposed by the 2, Libbey Forum, the discussion cussed by student leaders and money, must look forward to more Student would be an extra-official will formally begin. Although the patriotism and lack of natiot.al self-respect formed the basis credit, but not money. Y.W.C. A. Council members or the faculty. one, but made up of the presidents meeting is under the direct super- of the tirade against the British students. The pi. Sicily over The Bates Student, under the of the campus organizations. It in- vision of the Politics Club, all stu- this question gave the Peace movement* in the British isles a direction of Editor Thomas HtHCM- WO weeks ago this column cludes: head cf th.- Student Coun- dents are invited to attend and to great impel us. The action at Brown last month, although v,.. has taken the lead in arranging carried the sad story of a Seeks Solutions join in the discussion. cil and Governments, Y. M. and Y. not. nearly its extreme as the Oxford declarator has percept- ! these chapel discussions. Next Mon- T Chicago teacher, unpaid for W., W. A. A., the Athletic Council, Provokes Criticism i day is the day set for the first dis- seven months, who was given ten and the four classes. This group, it To Difficulties al.lv upset the people of the little state of Rhode Island. cussion of the proposition, and fur- JRELLA8 months in jail for larceny to support is proposed, may invite other stu- Colleges in many sections of the Charges of communist influence have led the Legislature of world have been giving this subject ther discussions will follow on Tues- his hutigry family. Now another ex- dents to the meeting. On' of its thai state to ay poJP t a committee to investigate affairs on the dav and Wednesday. ample from the Windy City: of discussion much prominence dui'- members it is presumed will be Members To Work For ng the past few months, and in basis that the commonwealth is somehow Imperiled by tins Six Speakers "Because he had received no sa- chairman and take charge of a plan Dr. Amos Hovey, Howell Lewis, DBAOS lary for eight months", the Boston Unity Among Groups many cases the attitude of the col- form of undergraduate enterprise. Again th•■ Boston Herald to be proposed to the faculty com- lege students has evoked wide and Donald Smith, Theodore Seamon, Herald says, "Paul Schneider, 44, mittee. takes up the question an S compares this action with that ol Clive Knowles, and Clyde Holbrook father of three children and a man- On Campus scathing criticism. When a majority LDS This administrative group has not. .f the undergraduates in the Oxford the British home secretary, who entirely ignore! the stud> ni | will be the speakers during the ual training teacher employed by It is said, scheduled a meeting-for Members of the Y. W. C. A. coun- I three-day discussion period. the board of education committed Union announced that they would declaration.
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