Page 90 - 1918 February - To Dragma
P. 90
TO DRAGMA OF ALPHA OMICRON PI 183
EXCHANGES
We acknowledge with thanks the receipt of the following
exchanges:
Kappa Alpha Theta, Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha, The AgUda of
Phi Mu, The Arrow of Pi Beta Phi, The Eleusis of Chi Omega,
Sigma Kappa Triangle, The Crescent of Gamma Phi Beta, The Key
of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Phi Quarterly, Alpha Xi Delta, The
Anchora of Delta Gamma, The Phi Chi Quarterly, The Garnet and
White of Alpha Chi Rho, The Phi Gamma Delta, The Record of
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, The Beta Sigma Omicron, The Scroll of Phi
Delta Theta, and Santa's Greek Exchange.
Magazines which regularly exchange with To DRAGMA w i l l please
note that the following exchange list is the correct one:
Mrs. B. F. Stewart. Grand President, Sierra City, Cal.
Miss Anna Many. 1325 Henry Clay Ave., New Orleans, La.
Miss Mary Ellen Chase. 1316 7th St. S.E., Minneapolis, Minn.
Are you being educated in this sense?
No, not book-learning, but tastes are what survive longest of the things
acquired through a college education. I would consider my education a
failure if, when listening to some great symphony, my ears should fail to
catch a particularly beautiful chord or theme; if, in reading or listening to
a great poem or story, my mind should fail to catch the beauty of some sur-
passing thought or passage; if my eye should fail to perceive the beauty in
every changing color of sunset or landscape; or, if in that march of souls,
which we call "life," my heart should fail to beat in sympathy and under-
standing with every human deed or aspiration, good or bad. My acquain-
tance with the great humans of the past handed down to us in the books
which made up our college world should have given me those tastes and
that sympathy. I f they have not survived, though I remember every fact
and figure in those books my education is a failure.—Shield of Phi Kappa
The only way to make persons realize that they are responsible
for anything at all is to keep everlastingly talking about it. We
nave joined the ranks of those who keep everlastingly at it. Are you
m any way responsible for these conditions? I f you are, through
simply being passive, how about beginning to create public sentiment?
A WAR-TIME RESPONSIBILITY
B Y BRF.WF.R E D D Y
It is all right for Sister Susie to sew shirts for soldiers and for the click
th" k n i t t i n g n e e d l e f ° be heard in the land, but Sister Susie's mother is
inking very deeply about the circumstances and conditions that will surround

