THE BATTALION 9 <&]i(!iiiiiiiiiE]iiimiiiijiEiii!imiiiiiE3;ii:j!iii!Si[:]iiiiiimiiiC]iiii!iiiimc2iiiii!iii!iic]miiiiiiiiu;]iiiiiiiiiiiiCiiiiiiiiiiiiicii!iiii!ii!ii[]iimiiiiiiiciiii^ THE LIBRARY PAGE THE WISE ONES Are making their selections NOW from the MARY NEW m ATTRACTIVE GIFTS which we are receiving. We will gladly re serve any gift NOW for Christmas delivery. SANKEY PARK X3xn,zxxoxxca.i5t JSSiX-«7"e>x* JX.'toXxost »:«!IIE2mmilllllE3IIIIIIIIIIIIEllllllll!lll!E3!mimil!!E3ll!im!!iliE]!imi!l!ll!E]UlliniimEl!mi:m!l!E'm!!llll!lliE]!llllllimiE]milllimiE}|||||||l!Ui{r«> R. H. SHUFFLER Editor H. C. GIVENS Asso. Editor J. R. KEITH Asso. Editor G. M. WREN Asso. Editor J. W. RILEY Asso. Editor Those wishing to contribute to this page turn work in to any member of staff, or mail to Editor at 94 Stu dents’ Exchange. TOLERANCE. THE CAMPUS BARBER SHOP IN THE Y WHERE SERVICE AND FRIENDSHIP MEET BERT SMITH «Mm«mBnnsii5!ii!iiifniiK!!s;!!iattitiiiH}HU4m!JHiiUL2ii!titiHii!:3-mmiwiin'jNmi«niurHiminnnK, , ii!mn}C3Hiii(i[uiiaui;aui;riOK4^ S WE WANT YOU TO KNOW OUR SHOP AND THE 3 KIND OF WORK WE DO— OUR PLACE IS CONVENIENT TOO. The Campus Cleaners & Tailors (OVER EXCHANGE STORE) (Operated by Former Students Ass’n. for Student Loan Fund.) ^jimuiiimuiiimmiiintinHiKiiiaiiiiimtiiuiiiHiiiimcjiiitiiiiiiiiuiiiiHiiiiiiumiimiiunuiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiniiiiicnmiiiuiiiuitiiiiiiimuitt^ Drawing Material VICTOR AND BRUNSWICK TALKING MACHINES AND RECORDS | R. C. A. AND ATWATER KENT Radios i i ROYAL, CORONA AND REMINGTON PORTABLE | TYPEWRITERS I HASWELL’S BOOK STORE f ai For Life Insurance SEE Crenshaw & Mitchell 27 ASTIN BUILDING ED CRENSHAW “SCRIPT” MITCHELL /tv; i\n\ tv mmmmmmmm ^ x Intolerance is as old as the hu man race. In the beginning when men were weak and clung together for protection, they found that one who differed from them might bring death to the whole tribe. Self-de fense forced them to kill all such dissenters, and there evolved a race characteristic which still exists and which we know as intolerance. Today, however, intolerance is no longer necessary to the life of mankind and we could live more happily if we could only get rid of it. Probably the human race will never be free of intollerance, but before we can make a definite decision we should look through the history of the world and see what the human races have done in days gone by— Not the wars they have fought, or the conquests they have made, but a history of those few men who Lave prodded the rest of the world into some kind of action, and just such a story is told in Tolerance by Hendrich Van Loon. The book reads mpre like a novel than a history, for Van Loon has a most entertaining trick of bring ing out the things that make his tory readable. The periods in his tory that we studied about but never really understood are brought home to us and are orientated so that we see each of them in its re lation to all the rest. Beginning with the Greeks and their most ex traordinary but short lived civiliza tion we pass on down to the middle ages, getting a glimpse of the causes of the dark ages and the attitude of men toward each other. During the period in which the church had control of the world we get a pan oramic view of what happened. The men who fought against the church appear to us not as disconnected names of obscure philosophers, but as real men who by their revolt against the established order of things kept our civilization moving forward. We learn that the inquisition was not solely an instrument of torture designed by the church to wreck vengence upon its enemies, but was a weapon used in self-defense to prevent the church’s immediate over throw by the rising forces of the times. The Rennaissance, a period in which men restlessly turned from one subject to another, seeking to learn more about the world they lived in, did much to overthrow the power of the church. Not necessarily a conscious revolt against the church, but a continual inquiry into the facts of life, brought men to a realiza tion that the one book that had been help up to them as inspired con tained some very serious geograph ical errors. The skepticism thus en gendered spread from the geogra phy of the Bible to its religious and ethical teachings, and the day arriv ed when a man could doubt all things and express his opinions with out his neck being in immediate dan ger. Soon after followed the Reforma tion, which was really a political and economic revolution with only a slight bit of theology for coloring matter. The world was presented with a book that was supposed to be infalliable to replace the man who was supposed to be infalliable. The world divided itself into intellectual prisons, the one Catholic and the other Protestant, but the Protestant prison was not so secure and from it escaped the more determined men so that soon the whole building was a ruin. The rest of Van Loon’s story is a narrative of the work of these very men. Erasmus, Rabelais, Calvin, Arminius, Bruno, Spinoza, and several others pass briefly be fore us, and we get a connected pic ture of their march across the stage of history in words that are not often offered to us. Since the days of the Reformation we have undoubtedly advanced far, but as. yet, we are only upon the very beginning of the path that leads to tolerance. It was only a hundred and fifty years ago when the first constitution was written which allowed a man to hold office without adhering to a certain re ligious sect. Man is only beginning to draw away from the Old Stone Age, and the protective instinct of the herd still sticks close with him. Fear and ignorance still rule su preme and until those two powers are overthrown and forgotten we cannot hope for universal tolerance. When man triumphs over his fears, then—and only then—can he live in a state of perfect tolerance with his fellowman. Most probably that will Army Man finds Tobacco "Like Old Friend” U. S. Army Fort Robinson, Nebr. May 29, 1928 Larus & Bro. Co. Richmond, Va. Gentlemen: Speaking of champion long-time members of the EDGEWORTH Club, say: ^it isn’t how long you have smoked Edgeworth, it’s how well you have en joyed the smoke. Why, I have walked out of many a store, especially when traveling, to stop at some one-horse town and buy Edgeworth. A good pipe deserves Edgeworth, and Edgeworth mine gets. I would not insult it with any other. “The familiar blue cans are every where,” and usually you find men of taste carrying them, which proves it is not the price that determines a good “smoky” tobacco, but the care and method that produce it. I would rather go - days without Edgeworth and at the end draw a deep inhale of that cool “smelly” aroma, satisfying to the last puff, than punish my throat and lungs and nostrils with inferior grades. Edgeworth is “The Smoke With a Personality,” like an old friend, you learn to know and understand, and when troubled or when you have a “thinky” problem—you seek its sol ace and companionship. Very truly yours, (signed) E. H. Fulmer Edgeworth Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco