Page Two MAROON AND GOLD September 9, Mnrmn mh Published by the Students of Elon College Member of the North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Entered at the Post-Office at Elon College, N. C., as second-class matter. Two Dollars Per College Year - Editor -Managing Editor Business Manager Paul G. Hook C. W. Kipka G. E. Ring - P. B. Sawyer Assistant Business Manager Phalti Lawrence Advertising Manager Hurley Shepherd Assistant Advertising Manager Mary Brannock Circulation Manager Jewell Truitt Assistant Circulation Manager Cecil Cox Assistant Circulation Manager G. F. Womble Assistant Circulation Manager J. B. Brown Assistant Circulation Manager J. W. Barney Faculty Advisor Advertising Rates Upon Request OUR PRESIDENT SUE RAINE, B. S., M. A. HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS THIRTY YEARS HENCE AN ADDRESS BY PRES. HARPER It is with great pleasure at this beginning, thirty-eighth year of our beloved Elon, to make our president the subject of our first editorial. This man has been the guiding genius in the making of our Big'ger and Better Elon. We know of no other man—east, west, north or south—w'ho could have accomplished what has been done in so short a length of time. An institution a few years ago not known beyond the confines of our own denomination is rapidly tak ing its place as a pioneer in the field of Religious Education and our president is considered as an authority in this field. We students are proud to follow his steps and pledge our hearty co-operation for the continuation of the rapid growth of what we hope to be our Alma Mater. We recognize that whatever helps Elon grow stronger gives greater facilities to assist us in making better preparation for journey along life’s pathway. We appreciate President Harper as an educator, as a financier, as a Christian statesman, as a counselor, as an optimist, as a com rade, as president of Elon College. —E C— From all indications this is going to be a banner year for Elon College. The freshmen are fresh and plentiful. May each one of them be as foursquare when he goes out in life’s work as he is in turning the corners on our campus. Freshies, wear your cap with equal pleasure to yourself and honor to the institution of which you are now a part. Sophomores, keep that old ’30 high in honor and loyalty to your college. Upperclassmen, all, you have now had one or more years in col lege. When you entered you probably did not know what you wanted to do or be. You now “know' the ropes,” so to speak. You have become acquainted with your professors, with your studies and with the college life in general. You have the opportunity to make the coming year the best yet. Let’s look forward to the year 1927-28. Let us prepare ourselves and determine to make it a better year, athletically, scholastically and socially, than any that has preceded it. —E C— Freshmen, you have one of your greatest opportunities before you. This is the opportunity of “making good” in college. You have now decided to secure a college education before launching out on life’s broad sea. Enter into your college work with an open mind, with unprejudiced opinion, with a willingness to learn, and you will learn many things that will be priceless to you in later life. —E C— Fellow students, this is your paper, the voice of Elon College, your school. Let’s get right behind our athletics, our college pub lication, our studies. A college is rated and judged by the caliber of the students it turns out. Each one of us is required to do his part. —E C— The interest and co-operation of every student of Elon College are needed to secure the success of our college publications. Please contribute your part, financially, scholastically, and enthusiastically. —E C— When going to Burlington to do your shoping, patronize our ad vertisers. Mention the Maroon and Gold to them. A few kind words help greatly. Keep that old smile and cheerful disposition and you will most certainly win out in the end. Others see us/’ but this would be a calamity. It would worry the life out of us if wc could know just what our neighbors think of us, most of us no doubt would be driven to' suicide, but we can determine the kind of men we will be and that is our chance. We should begin early iu life to fashion our environment and to utilize our heredity to make of ourselves the men and women we want to be thirty years hence. A few years ago when one o'f the pyramids of Egypt was being explored in the hand of a mummy that had been buried for centuries were found some grains. The archeologist who found these seeds could have decided to ex amine them under the microscope to see what manner of seed they were. He did not do this, however. He de cided to plant them and they produced beautiful plants and yielded an abund ance of similar seeds. It is possible, however, that the plants which his care ful cultivation produced, might have been slightly different from or better than the parent plants that originally produced the seeds. This instance suggests certain things about youth and about human nature. Just as the archeologist had two choices nient and heredity do not predict for with reference to the seeds he held in his ua whnt will take place thirty years | hand, just so the older generation has hence in tlie life of any Freshman who two choices with reference to the youth (Coutinued from Page 1) enters tliis institution this fall. The thing that will determine, in the final analysis, the status of each one of the class of 1931 will be personal effort. We may be possessed of such tremen dous force of character that despite any of the generation just behind them. They can examine carefully the physi cal, spiritual and other characteristics that make up the young life of tlie world. They can place them under tlie microscope, so to speak, and find oppOT- handicap of wealth, social position, or j tunities for criticism as well as for physical deformity, we may react sue- |praise, but the best thing that can bo cessfully upon environment and heredity Idone with the youth of the world is to and wrest from them the victory in educate them and see what they will be- life that we crave for ourselves. On the other hand, we may be such weak lings that in spite of magnificent en dowments in physical, mental, social or other realms, we shall fail to achieve any distinction and become miserable failures. It all depends upon us. ' When Woodrow Wilson was making his first inaugural address as President of the United States, he coined a word which has been an inspiration to our come. And just as the careful methods of cultivation employed by the gar dener may change the plants with which he works foT the better, just so through proper methods of education human nature may be refashioned and changed for the better. The finest thing that can be said of human nature is that it can be changed. It must, how ever, be changed in youth. Wlvat our youth are to become is the responsi- nation and particnlarly to the youth of generation. The our nation. I am referring to the word forward-looking,which he used for the first time at tliat great moment in his life and in the history of our government. With no thought of preaching to the class of '31 at this time, as I am sure that President Wil son had no thought of preaching to his fellow-citizens when he was inaugurated president, I suggest that the thought connoted in this word is fraught with incalculable potentiality for the success of the young man or the young wo man who will accept it as a sort of motto for the ordering of life. TJie man who looks forward does no't bv reason of his major interest in that direction cease also to profit by the experiences of the race. In fact, he is unable to look forward successfully without also' looking backward. That is really what a college course is for. to shorten the period of experience, so to speak, or what is the same thing by possessing us of the experience of others to lengthen our lives. That is what W^oo'drow Wilson had iu mind when he called upon the American people to be come forward-looking, and that is what I have in mind at this time. Do not betterment of the human race and of human society becomes primarily the responsibility of the older generation, as gardeners, so to speak, of the social and spiritual realm. There are a lot of people, however, who' can not see the advantage of the method of cultivation and education. They have noses for investigation. They have the spirit and attitude of diagnosis and they are never satisfied until they have picked to pieces what ever things come into their hands, whether it be the seed buried for cen turies with an Egyptian mummy or a young life. The human body, these microscopic individuals have discover ed, when it has attained maturity and the weight of 150 pounds, is not only the marvelous instrument of an im mortal spirit, but also a machine com- posed of fifteen chemical elements, with special emphasis not on the machine, but on the elements. They can not see the body in its perfect adaptatio-n to its various purposes for the elements that make it up chemically. They say with scientific do-lefulness that this 150 pound individual, for example, contains 21,000 gallons of hydrogen, 9.000 gallons be satisfied with tlie day that is, as con- I oxygen, 450 gallons of nitrogen, 9 stituting a special experience, but think I clorine. a total of 30,459 'gallons of gas, sufficient gas to float an airship around the world. They have also discovered that this human body contains 27 pounds of charcoal, 3 Select an ideal and put forth every calcium, 1 1-2 pounds of of each day in terms of what has been and in terms of what is to be. Adopt a goal and strive toward it. Set up a standard and endeavor to reach it. fort possible to realize it. Thus through personal effort our forward-looking ambition, our impelling aspiration will use both environment and heredity to promote our life interests. It used to be said Wiat in every man are three men,—the man that really is, the man each one thinks he is, and the man his neighbor thinks he is. This is hardly the whole truth, for there is a fourth man in every one of us, the man we can be. It is impossible to separate a man into these .four individuals, and it is well that we cannot. Robert Burns, the poet, wished that we might have the power to see ourselves phosphorous. S 1-2 ounces of potassium G ounces of sulphur, 3 7-10 ounces of sodium, 1 3-10 ounces of magnesium, 1 ounce of iron, and a trace of iodine, silicon and fluorine, in all abo-ut 33 pounds of solid substance. They also have evaluated these chemicals and found that they are worth 98c. and this is all they can see to the physical body of man. There are other 1927 thusiasm, energy, consecration, altruisn, optimism, discontent, restiven ’ rcvercnce. lovableness and leadabil^*’ They can not see the young life these charactristics and they are faulty in their judgments of youth as arc the chemists in their conoeptiong of the human body. It is the organization of the cheniieal elements that constitute the gases aad the solid substances into the human body, the most marvelous mechanism ever conceived. And, while these chemical elements themselves are agf worth perhaps more than 98c, in cobj. bination they are the most valuable machine of which we have any concep. tion. Just so the combination of those splendid spiritual characteristics of youth in varying degrees and pro- portions makes human life most engag. ing and charming. The critic will make fun and the cynic may sneer, but the real artist will appreciate man’s bodj and his spiritual disposition and char- acter, and in appreciating them will enco'urage each individual to his best physically and spiritually. Robert Browning once said, “It jj not what man does, but what man would do, that exalts him.” This is a good text and might become the basis not of a sermon simply, but of a life philosophy. Dwight L. Moody evident ly felt the foTce of this sentiment of Browning’s, though he was likely not aware of the poet’s having said it, Dwight L. Moody resolved when he was a clerk in a shoe store that God should have full control of at least one life, so that it might be seen what God couM do w'ith the life that is completely sur rendered to Him. Moody became a great evangelist and, though he never became a minister, as a layman he was one of the greatest preachers that the Christian centuries have produced. In closing I will remind you of Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln evidently believed in the philosophy which Brown ing outlined. Though he was bom in poverty and had only such oppo^ tunities for education as he could make for himself by studying at night bv pine knot . Ughout of_h£*r-ctfD^U bo'oks, he is reported to have said witli sublime confidence in the future, with a genuine belief in the ability of a man by personal effort to use both heredity and environment in a forward-looking way to win success, “I do not have much chance in life, but I will do my best to prepare myself and some day perhaps my time will come.” What Abraham Lincoln was able to' achieve is not only a precious heritage, but an everlasting inspiration as well to the youth not only of America, but of the world. What we will be "Thirty Years Hence” depends upon what we decide we want to be on September the 6th. 1927. BURLINGTON, THE CITY are other microscopic in dividuals who have catalogued the spiritual characteristics of youth and have discovered that our young people are composed of certain abiding charms, such as open-mindedness, broad- as mindedness, courage, confidence, en- Why do we love Burlingto'n so well? It is a progressive and rapid growiDg" city and offers the opportunities that a small town or country village doesn^t have. There are special advantages found in Burlington which combined are found in no other growing city of North Carolina; namely—Elon College^ a great institution for education; the city’s school system, one unequaled iff the state; finally the Burlington ness College. Aside from these special advantaged are the advantages in having the chain of stores and business firms which have .0 loyally aided us in putting out the Maroon and Gold. Burlington, with its mild average climate has enticed many people to move here, and prosper under its thrifty leaders; but of course, what really makes a city is the people who live there, and as the greatest of all reason? for believing in Burlington, is the citi zenship of Burlington, the finest people in the good Old North State. “Cycles and motor-driven vehicles must light their lamps 30 minutes h®' fore sunset, the exact liour of whicfi will be fixed by the mayor.” So decrees the mayor of Koege, a small town in Denmark.—Selected.