Show iiin tmmmssKmas£ y y kVUVAVAH j Student Life 16 such disaster in athletics Its true worth and benefit is evident Again athletics even where the one year rule is enforced may fail Should the athlete fail to put forth his best and most honest effort he has never learned the most rudimentary meaning of Loyalty When the player injures himself by his hold on his human desires so as to smoke or break training in any manner athletics are failing The association will not be that of highest ideals but of trickery mockery and insincerity He is not only injuring himself but ing others He is not striving for the highest degree of perfection possible for himself Such an athlete whether he is superior or not superior to his fellow athletes even in unconditioned form should be forced out of the game that the higher and truer aims may be attained There should be a dominating spirit rooted in the souls of athletes which will hold them to the highest level of American manhood When this is lacking the purpose of athletics is failing and such athletes grow dangerous because of their great power to do permanent injury to college athletics JManha Unfoersrttp 1 CHEXCHIAII Long before Christ came in the world in the centre of I far from the busy life the world and in a beautit dia park on the bank of a genl river stood a gre university The Xalanda Ui flowing wall Ch- ! i- tntioi: the a It ' Mi1 n: i was state went a little further than the American states It made tuition free and also fed and clothed the students at its expense This fact is all the more interesting when we consider that there were over six thousand students at one period Xor was it less cosmopolitan the Dravidian Uongot and Caucassian races were among the alumni The university was devoted to One work haul to have a good knowledge ff a subject before he could liter the Xalanda University The entrance examinations were A professor waited peculiar at the gate of the compound post-gradua- ‘ te |