VoL. XXV .
. NOVEMBER, 1898.
No. 1.
.lENtor==in==<rbtef. HENLY
M. FUGATE .
:associate .lENtors. ARTHUR J. HALL, Philologian. EDWARD T. POULSON, Philologian .
LITERARY. WALTER S. McNEILL, Mu Sigma Rho. A. COLLEGIAN BURNLEY LANKFORD, Mu Sigma Rho.
ATHLETICS. ROBERT L: WILLIAMS, Mu Sigma Rho. EXCHANGES. ARCHIBALD C. HARLOWE, Philologian.
:J.Sustness.managers. Mu Sigma Rho. ALLEN W. FREEMAN, THOMAS B. SPENCER, Ass't, Philologian.
Contact. most potent factors in the development . of character are ·THE contact with men, with books, and with nature, and since these elements do enter largely into the shaping of our lives, we do well to consider the methods for coming under these influences and for adapting our selves to their ever-varying conditions. It is evident that by discussing these factors separately we more or less destroy their unity of effect, inasmuch as their functions frequently overlap; and yet we attempt this course, believing that we can thereby the better g-ive to each its proper sphere, and at the same time trust the reader to see that character is the end of the forces working togetherand not separately.