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Page 22 text:
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more clearly and appreciate more fully that life is lived from within and that its abun- dance must How from the depth of the cultured and educated mind. This is the type of man the future just ahead of us is demanding. This is the type of educational preparation which is given in the College of Arts and Sciences at St. Louis University. There is hope that in America the College may regain its place as the center of our universities' intellectual life, there is hope that concomitantly with the College's coming into its birthright a saner and sounder type of leader may be developed. V Educators and professional men the world over are beginning to realize the necessity of a thorough liberal preparation for those who aspire to become good professional men, leaders in their respective fields. Many medical schools and law schools now require a bachelor's degree for entrance. Others have increased their pre-requisite courses to three years. All encourage a foundation as complete as the student's financial position allows. And it is to the interest not only of society, but even of the individual himself, that he be liberally educated. Thereby he learns not only how to earn a living but also how to live. v FRESHNXEN . . in the College of Arts and Sciences. TH REE . . . of the most popular gathering places otArts students are the Arts College ntrance, the Church corner, the recreation room on the ground floor of the Arts building. BOTH ELATED AND DOWN- :AST . . . are the countenances of those emerging from the office ol' Rev. Thomas Nl. Knapp, SI., where the monthly grades re gn en out. . ., is U J A j W 1 f , X.. N gl A :XXX if . ...,.-.... up .,., 154,32 K -,Qas.fF3?-ggi! iswflb CD3 a 5 at Y ffl U i UXHQLQYG Q t M st
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Page 21 text:
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A 3'i gOPHOMORES fbelowD the College of Arts 1 Sciences. young men and women eager to re-assert and strive for the right objectives of civiliza- tion and culture and human effort. Obviously, to effect such an accomplishment, there must be many more liberally educated men. V The man who is truly liberally educated is the effective man, Who, as Cardinal Newman says in his Idea of a Un Zc1ef'.fZ!y, is at home in any society-has a common ground with every class 5-knows when to speak and when to be silent 5-can ask a question pertinently, and gain a lesson seasonablyf' Without a doubt, there is a lack today of men who have that education which teaches them to see things as they are, to go right to the point, to disentangle a skein of thought, to detect what is sophistical, and to discard what is irrelevant. In fine, Newman's idea of a university training must come to be more fully appreciated. We need more men whose education prepares them to fill any post with credit and to master any subject with facility. It is strange that educators have lost sight, to a great extent, of so seemingly elementary a principle. lt is strange that they have believed that almost any type of specialized technical training could form the background for a successful and effective man's life. The future, if it is to be bright, must be dominated more and more by educated men, by thinkers trained in literature and the classics and philosophy, in the social sciences, history and sociology, political science and economics, and all that goes to constitute the liberal culture of an advanced civilization. Perhaps it is too much to hope that the near future will find the great majority of the American youth ambitious for the things of the mind. Yet adversity may have taught mankind that not alone by bread does it live. For the dawn is red with promise of a day wherein we shall see v20v IUNIORS Cabovej AND
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Page 23 text:
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n - V wx: .. .. , g:,:4. ',., . qz. 4. 1 - :- ,,, ,-A 555 ,jim g95Ea?g.zew5:5,,,qg '1'X-,fx-1. if 2-.,,v--mu,-W-.ww-Av N , . if , , 1 , 'WS f we ff 1 'L - 1 '- V Yi Kim f- . 9,4 f 'A ' A , . Q ' 19251, '.' , ff 5f97?5f3E55.E:f552if,3:?c7':'1-f- , ' ,-J: , ., - f,13.f':-wgw144,11 V ' Qfiif . -- if f ,A+ ' mf g27,iff'25., g:, gigs: 145,-. :' . .V 55335 .... z ,N , , ,-,.-,,'3m.f-52,52 f, ' ' 1 --' 1 .X .,, 5:.k,:. ,,.,i,.-:Vg .,..,, 2, ! 3 2? if MW' f I rf, REV ALPHONSE M SCHVVITALLA, SI Dean of lhe School of Zllerzfcine. . , VV., .U -fy ,- 33 f e k f -' , x. i qf.f. ' f ffinrw' .., 1, 1 X! H m f-ff gf ' x Q a,, W - Q. y iw ,XXV-f 3 i 14 1 ' 5'3- f ix 'K 5 Hx , ,f af , 51, till --'D 1 fi- - '- v' , X xv ,N ixzixx :L KX -, Ns! ' f-ff fraix .xx WTKQX W' X , ,ff J, ,-., x .5 Q' , x .- kin , X ,wk-,tv , uf f ' V VL- xx .4 xr 1 I Sckoof e icilze f
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