Show MALICK SPEAKS SPEAK ABOUT LUY LOYALTIES L TIES TO TU U STUDENTS Must Learn Smaller Loyalties Before Attempting to Master Larger Ones GRADUATES JAVE HAVE CHARGE Easiest Way to Get An Education Today is the Hardest Way He Says The Rev Hev John Mailed Malick delivered an intensely interesting address to a small but appreciative audience in the auditorium last Friday The Graduate club had charge and Guy Cutler pre pre- sided Mr 11 Malick chose as his theme Major hl and Minor 1 Loyalties According to Rev Malick a a. person cannot annot be loyal to the bigger bigger things without first being loyal to th the intervening intervening intervening inter inter- institutions and the little things incident to every day life In part the speaker said Loyalty means a certain attitude towards life It means that one can enn put ones one's self Ina in ina ina a situation and stay b by it until the last gun is fired and if n necessary give his life for the cause It is something in the individual dual which impels him to 10 tobe tobe be true to himself true truo to the loyalties loy loy- loyalties of other people A combination of these loyalties make for the fraternIzed fraternized fraternized fra fra- fra- fra communities and the bigness and fineness of it all we call religion But according to the speaker one cannot be loyal 1011 to the larger things in life liCe without first taking out an apprenticeship apprenticeship in the intervening institutions such as the school and church Continuing Continuing Continuing Con Con- Rev Malick MaUck declared Anyone Anyone Anyone Any one who Is loyal lo to the big thing without without without with with- out being loyal to the little thing is sailing under a Ph D D. D without first attaching atI attaching at at- I taching to his name the A. A B. B There are nations this way ray There are men this way men disloyal to their homes and families and these of course cannot be he loyal to the group They have not reached the place in evolution where they the have crossed the theline theline theline line form the disloyal to the loyal It is our ultimate purpose and duty to bring these peoples to the thing which we have had for over oyer one hundred hundred hundred hun hun- dred and fifty years pears in this country by bya a a. wise humane and colonial policy Experience Is only what we have to do We Ve love those things which wo we have to do in proportion as we have to do them If you are not getting getting getting get get- ting these things things loyalty loyalty and discipline line line line-in in these intervening institutions of ours you rou will be compelled d to seek I them in after life Ufe when perhaps it will be too late The easiest way to get an education education education tion today is the hardest wa way The easiest way to learn a lesson is to real read Continued on P. P 4 4 Col Co 3 MALICK SPEAKS TO STUDENTS ON LOYALTY Continued from Page 1 Column G 6 the hardest books about it and the reverse reverse reverse re re- re- re verse is true Our forefathers when anything looked easy and pleasant to lo lodo todo todo do took it as prima facie evidence that it was to be avoided I Life is doing things you dont don't want to do High minded people in all generations generations generations gen gen- past have regarded life as a ajob ajob ajob job to be done therefore go out and do it It ft It is because we lack the discipline discipline discipline dis dis- dis- dis and training necessary to regard regard regard re re- re- re gard life this way that we ve must introduce in in- it And in iii thus doing and loving loving loving lov lov- ing what we do for the mere sake salce of or doing it we are destined to make a Greater America Darnel Darriel Christensen a member of the tho university orchestra played a violin violin violin vio vio- lin solo accompanied by La Lawrence wrence Eberl Eberly |