0 mtttimmmmmmmtm HESPERIAN STUDENT UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. Vol. XI. LINCOLN, NEB(, JUNE i, 1883. No. XV. MISCELLANEOUS MENTION. Another tragedian, Col. J. L. Burlolgh is coming, into prominence. Ills presence) and bearing arc noble, bis voice is rich and of great compass 11 ml flexibility and his action strong, graceful and subdued. The Santa Fe Tertio.Millcnnial Celebrationis detincd to bo one of lliopvniidcst events of present year; the press throughout the United Stales have received special invitations and no doubt they will bo well rep. resented at the festivities. - David Swing says "Man is a river which goes on for ever, but you and I ore creatures of a day and arc crowded aside by the noy inflowing crowd. Individual souls arc only the leaves with which the living forest clothes itself for only one summer time." The authorities of Harvard are deliberating as to whether they will couflr thc.dcgreo. oil L. L. D. as usual upon the governor of tho state. A degree should bo an indication of scholarship, but Butler possesses neither learning nor marked ability and lias no sympathy for that institution. The degree should by no means bo granted. In the June number of tho North American Review is an excellent article on tho Modern drama. Tho ground is taken that thoro is necessarily no conflict botween tho stage and tho church. The object of tho drama is to dhow the nature of man as it is and that of the church to correct it. The duty of the church there fore begins whero tho drama ends, both working harmoniously to accomplish tho 0110 great end. Tho beauties of earth and sky, of the changing seaeons, and of day and night, cannot be monopolized by one build ing in a street, or by one street in a city; they cannot be closed against those who have not a golden passport for admission ; but they aro free and open to whomsoever -may have an eye and an imagination that have been first taught to enjoy thorn. A taste for tho beauties of nature should bo cultivated by nil. In theso there is nothing cots rupting or meretricious. Tho noblo poet has found anotiipr biographer in a cor Main Mr. Jefferson who claims to have presented in a volum of six hundred pages a portrait of tho "real" Lord Byron. His ancestors according to this author, consisted of masculine cranks and feminine termagants, of which 'crankism and termagantism Byron was tho pure essence. He has composed this whole work iu.a truly misanthro pic spirit and deserves congratulation on his successful eflort at cyniolo criticism. Wo hopo that for tho sake of .humanity that ho will write no more and trust that in this instnnco ltis obscurity may prevent him from tar nishing tho brightness of a noblo man. Science is not sectarian. -It drteu not crinflno itself to any segment of tho qirclo.ol philosophy, but seeks to em brace tho entire circumference. At tho present day a bigot in science canhot live. Its pure empyream either exorcises tho demon of bigotry out of him orsonds him and It aficr tho swino of the Gar.lens to bo choked in a sea of oblivon. It has been asserted in a scientific essay that since; three fourths of tho 'human body consists of water and since tho mopn influences tho waters of tho globe, it must therefore, exert a powerful inllucnco upou tho body. This js especially noticeable in lunatics and college 8tijdc.ntb.. Careful observations and experments upon tho latter have established this scientific fact, tltat a full moon lias a tendency to increase nocturnal preambula tions, yet tho subject is most disposed to deeds of daring during tho "now moon;" but many phenomena have not yet been sufllccntly accounted for and many careful ob servations must bo made before such cases can be troated scientifically. Tho study of Latin and Greek is antagonistic to tho judgement of thousands in this utilitarian ago. Unless a young man is to become a minister, it cannot bo seen how it will be of much advantage to him to bo a clas sical scholar. He may bo obliged to talk German in his business, but ho never will need to talk Latin or Greek. An excellent classical scholar cannot, on account of be ing such, raiso more corn to the aero or succeed in a commercial venture. Pollutions look down upon him with scorn and the vulgar population ridicule his culs ture. On account of tliis feeling many young men aio driven away from classical colleges of well-known thor ougliness to "commercial" schools of equally well-known superficiality, where mental training is not oHcemed and the "practical" receives divine worship. Hero they leatn to perform what thoy have not tho intelligence to create. Tltejf become educated tools, always dependent, never self-asserting, always slaves, never masters. A purely technical education, ono that trains the oye or hand for special work, is necessarily one-sided. It may make great artisans, copyists and automatons, but never great thinkers. What is needed is a course of study that will awaken thought in tho student and lead him to original invest!, gation. This need is not supplied by the sciences since it only after years of patient toil that original work be. gins; nor by mathematics where all that is required of tho student is that he bo able to follow the reasoning of tho author and a memory capable of retaining it; but by the classics in which alone original thought and invest 1. gation begins with the first lesson and continues through tho course. vm