THE HESPERIAN. The most important question for the literary so cieties to settle during the present year is that of the commencement exhibitions. A change is admitted by all to be necessary, but it will be difficult to agree upon the details of anew arrangement. It has been proposed that these exercises be held in the winter term and that the Junior class be entrusted with the responsibility of giving the commencement exhibi tion. This plan does not meet with unqualified fav or however, and will in all probability be rejected. The Hesperian favors holding one exhibition each term, and none . during the week of comencement. The closing days of the college year will be (fever ed enough without the herculean efforts of the socie ties to give the "best exhibition ever held in the city." A proposition for a literary contest has been made to the three societies by Mr. Win. O'Shea of this city. The prizes offered are valuable, and the terms of competition liberal, but it is hardly probable that a contest will be he'd this year. The interest taken in the work of the University by Mr. O'Shea, marks him as a citizen of more than usual public spir it, and we believe that his efforts to furnish occasions for forensic battles are thoroughly appreciated by the students. The reasons for declining to enter upon a contest at present are various, but the prin cipal one seems to be the lack of time on the part of those who would naturally be called upon to represent the societies. The increase in the amount of work required by the University makes every advanced student loth to take upon him self additional burdens. Nine students have been suspended from the Ohio Wesleyan University, and some fifty more disci plined" for the grievious fault of attending a repre sentation of "Richard the Third" in the theatre of the town in which the college is located. The per formance was by Fred Warde, and can be said to have been unobjectionable in every way, but the rules of the institution made such attendance end disas trously to the devotees of Shakespeare. If there is anything that will place The Hesperian in the prop er frame of mind for the coming national holiday, it is the thought that in our Univesrsity we are hamper ed by no rules of the above nature. Every student with the time and means can take advantage of the lessons taught from the stage, and receive the enjoy ment and culture that comes from an occasional eve ning at the opera. Circumstances have made the abuse of this privilege almost unknown, thus far, anr? there is no reason to apprehend that the efficient working of the University will ever be threatened by the superior attraction of the theater. MISCELLANY. The marking system is us barren and fruitless in developing the true scholar ns fear, character. Instead of a genuine love of study it creates an artificial desire to appear well in it, to show ofl. Learning is made a means instead of an end. The high pursuit of education is dragged down to a pitiful scram ble for marks. It is not history and literature which attract, hut the position of the everlasting with regard to them. Such a motive for study is false and unprofitable. It tends to destroy real, sincere love for learning by narrowing its province down to a mechanical race in which the all import ant question is "what grade shall I get? It is disgusting when one feels a real interest in a subject to have it expressed in cold figures. It sends a chill through him. It is much like examining several young men upon their affection for one of the fair sex, marking this one 80, that one 90, another 95 and so on. This might be business, but if the victims were of a poetic nature they would complain of the inadequacy of arithmetic to express sentiment. So knowledge might claim a little higher motive than is represented in a game of euchre. Offering marks as an inducement to get it is much like offer ing a man like Savonarola a sugar plum to a be martyr. The knowledge which truly profits a student is that he gets by intellectual sympathy. This may lead him beyond and in a different direction from the prescribed curriculum. While he may get a good general understanding of his class studies, his bent may impel him to seek new fields in which he enjoys himself without the everlasting examination machine cramp ing him. In intellectual growth and stature at the end of his course he rhay far excel the class worker; but in marks, be inferior. Arithmetic in this case lies. In fact it is out of its sphere when it attempts to guagc mental attainment. It were better to confine it to its proper and legitimate business in the world of traffic and barter and expel it from the realms of the heart and intellect that it may not cast a chill over these with its glaring realism. If possible let us keep something out of the clutches of this Minotaur of a mechanical age. If we arc not careful it will swallow everything. We shall a become automatons. Soon students will drag their love of marks into other things, and 11 brisk rivalry would ensue as to who should get highest grade in faith, charity, love, imagination, sentiment, ideality, spirituality, feeling and sensitiveness. They would compare marks on their papers with as much zeal as if it were a final examination in Geometry. A realist might regard this as an improvement. But the idealist prefers to have some things untainted by pedantry. He does not like to have his poetic ideals and fancies quoted in the market column of newspapers as going at so much along with rye and wheat. V There is a tendency now to sneer at moralists as if they were out of date. The aesthetic taste of people has become so cultivated that it shocks them to hear ethics mentioned. The ideal of man is to become a highly cultivated animal, en joying the sunshine, flowers, beautitul sunsets, etc., but hav ing no earnest thoughts about character and conduct; to pass through life as one would a picture gallery, looking with critical indifference on the contents; to make existence com fortable, hence rid one's self of all deep feelings. Such is the hero many now profess to admire. If living is only an empty ceremony, nothing at stake, and the only thing necessnry to pass away time agreeably, then this man of delicate taste and careless indifference is a hero. It may be unnecessary for one to trouble himself about the welfare of the world. 1 believe it is now considered a very 5