ALL INSTRUCTORS PLEASE NOTE The most difficult days of the entire school year for everyone in the dean's office come at the close of the Fall semester and at the beginning of the Spring semester, due chiefly to the very short time between semesters, in which we must do a great deal of work, We are not complaining about the situation, but simply urge your cooperation and help. You can help us most by reporting your final grades promptly. It would be a great aid to us if you would turn in the final grades of each class as soon as they are ready, without waiting to turn them all in together. Blessed are they who so do? All your grades should be in our office in time to be copied on our records before enrollment starts Monday morning, because many students change their classification at the mid-year, and every grade is needed in making these classification changes, Thrice blessed are they who fail us not in this } And in turn we are remembering that these are strenuous days for you, too. ADVISERS PLEASE NOTE Difficult questions are bound to arise with individual students in changing from the old group requirements to the new ones, It seems best, therefore, for the coming enrollment, to enroll all students presenting the old transcript according to the old arrange- ment as shown in the white schedules, while all students presenting the new form transcript should be enrolled according to the new arrangement as shown in the blue schedules, In case this plan seems to work an injustice to = student, please send him to see the desa, NOTICE OF FACULTY MEETING .The Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will hold its January meeting in Central Administration Auditorium at 4:30 on Tuesday, January 18, Our meetings are being well attended, and we will continue to do our best to make them short and worthwhile, Did you notice that we had no December meeting? OUR MISTAKE In our last issue we reported the number of majors in Sociology as 36. It should have been 76, which is the second largest number of majors in College departments this Fall, Please pardon us, all Sociologists} @oeaeeonweoeoenvweee "It is an old political dodge to predict certain election for your candidate and thus get all the week-— minded to clamber on the band wagon, The communist and the fascist today are using the same tactics, Accord- ing to the proponents of each regime, the future is inevitably theirs. ‘But such predictions can only come true in this country when the college graduates cease to have faith in the ideals of their alma mater, The university traditions of personal liberty and fearless, untrammeled discussion of all subjects is directly opposed to a dictatorship of the proletariat or a totaliterian state." --President Conant, Harvard University. "Teaching is the most difficult of all arts and the profoundest of all sciences," "The highest service we can perform for others is to help them to help themselves," "I hold treason against this govern— ment to be an enormous crime; but great as it is, I hold treason against free speech to be incomparably greater," ~-Horece Mann eeotenmeosts@# 020280 8 "Do not let “practical” men tell you that you should surrender your ideals because they are impractical. Do not be reconciled to dishonesty, indecency, and brutality because gentlemanly ways have been discovered of being dishonest, indecent, and brutal. As time passes resist the corruption that must come with it, Courage, temperance, liberality, honor, justice, wisdom, reason, and understanding, these are still the virtues,"--President Hutchins, University of Chicago,