,0 ~ no; YOlJlfO IIOOIALlBTI' .... G.&.ZDIlI ' , "it towers up on a line with thel'waying tree-tops. Laughing anr\:!ohouting they scramble up and licdown on the comfortable, wideb,-d. Slowly the wagon s\\'a~,along the road down to the "illag\'".:.treets, .. .Slowly the wagon sway!; alo n ;the street under the roaring ele\'ated train,To be sure, I am in the cil Y. onm)' wa)' to work, not in the comfortableold town of my boyhood.Sadly I look after the wagon. Behindthe hay wagon an empty roaldraw rolls down the street. TheIs Political Action Necesaary?drive r tries to pass. He ha
•An InterestingMuseumA trip to the museum should besomething more than just pastimefor an hour or two-somethingmore than an idly curious glanceat the specimens shown there, witha second look, perhaps at the thing",that arc a little more brilliantlycolored, a little more extraordinarythan the rest. The museum hasbeen built, enormous sums , ofmoney ha"e been spent and are beingspent year "her year to affordto the student. to the teacher. b\1tabove all , to the general publir amuns of cu!ture and education.Many museums, it is true. catermore to the former than to the latterclass of \'isitors. \\'e find collection$.Ihere worked out to thes malle ~ 1 of details. l'pecimens sovaried, and yet w similar that to theordinary person wh o sees onlytheir similar iI\', their closer exam.4I'lD TOll'!'G aOCIALD'1'I' llAO~a number of ·reasons, was not assuccessful as it should have been.The greater therefore is our appre·ciation of the kindness of Dr. )IIorris,the curator of the Nature andScience Department, who. in amanner so interesting that we re~retted the snl.'lll number of his·Iisteners. explained. with referenceto the collections. the modem scientifictheories of adaplalion and inheritanceand their effects upon theanimal and plant life of our pre s~ent times. So simply, that even thechildren who were presC!nt under!;tOod it. he showed how, throughklllg generation!'. those animal ..who we-re best adapted to their sur ~rounding ~ ):.urvived in the strugglefor existence- how their peclliiar.ities had impressed themselves upontheir progeny, so that entirelynew !'pt'cies, entirely new classeshad gradually developed. He~ h (l\\' ed how different surroundings·(hanged members of the same spe.:ies in a comparative\v short time.This intere!;ting ta'lk was deliveredbe fo r(' onl y a very small secinationbecon'l e~ exceedingly tiresome.To the ('3sual visitor, smalltion of the museum. Yet, we arerroup~. carefully arranged to illl1 ~ sure. that all of his listC!ners under ~trate some principle. some law ofstoot ill'cn hal·i ng th~ir I,l·r. 1'1\.' ..• re'lue~1 \\;1_ made thaI 1111'Ihe North a nd \\ ·e~ t Si d ... <strong>Young</strong> reu· lIr'l rdlearsals. Their " music·' will I. ••",' ·'PI""l1l a .:.)I1\IIII\(el· 10 1001..pic's ha;,eball t(' am s. r"l11e III 'cry h;lIldy for thc pan)'. lilt ... Ih,. I'",\I"I'III.'S ,,; l·~tahlishing a:\t 12.00 m., a recess will he tak~, ,-pl',la!)) "here it litt lc noise in the \ I' ... I. '11 Ihls cit.1;, nd h~ad~d by a hand of music. a ;1 -Iree\ is needcd to (all aHcntion to nit· ,.,nllllll\t·t'. (OIhhtll1).: of ~Ir s."'ill march across the s tr~u 10 \\'ash- Ih~ mectlngs ;nld u n ckn"ki ll g~. The Krul.'" \\ 111 i .• III Shurthff. [J r , Klr~chington Park. Luncheon will he in· I,,~_ hal~ Cl1t"fl'c! 111\(1 I Ill' ~piT11 of hel"K. 11"r\,·~ S.mmons .1nd !\. M.(\ulg~d in until J o'dock. Th t.' fl·U\lOn th,' \lork and c,",p,·.:t to 1l1 akl' a iinc TllOlIl." ..,il, r .1 ~"fI,'" ,)1' IIIN·tingj.I h~ follow ing program will " ~re n · al'l'eU:II11·l·. ...·(01)1111'11 '1,·,1 1.1 Ih,' J.o,·al that adefed : '~~,•. l'''''''' 1'(';' ),(11
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