February 14, 1922 (vol. 32, iss. 94) • Page Image 2
… d W -ANth. VaiVo- p blication ely entitled to the n" for edited to t or aqt @etri Arab q lisd a"therein. Arbor, Michiglan, .a s scod Streelt. words, if signed, the gig-x nt, but as an. evidence…
… bring their views- up to date. That day is long past when the literary college could be accused of preparing students for lives of uselessness. THE "W' G. N." EXCUSES ITSELF The Chicago Tribune has been…
… days when it was tstomary for literary students to saturate 'them- gves with Latin and Greek to no definite purpose, d when their chief concern in. life seemed to be make themselves as human as possible…
… with a inimum of effort. The slings and arrows of the itrageous fortune tellers have harried this type student and driven him from the field of ac-- n. The literary college of the present day is an…
… broad statement that "the av- erage student - or rather peanut - pends his time smoking cigarettes and wasting his father'. money, and his time. We might ask parenthetically why Sibler goes out of his way…
… to insult the students whosc confidence he is supposed to gain and whom he is sup- posed to lead into correct ways, when at the same time he practically admits that the fault, where there is a fault…
