COLLEGE MAGAZINE AND
THEIR USES
Outline:
1. A
good college magazine:- (a) Encourages composition and authorship. (b) faster
expertise corps (c) Keeps former students interested in the old college.
2. Necessity
of careful editing.
Most colleges have their own
magazines, edited by one of the students or a member of the staff, and made up
of articles written mainly by the students themselves. They may be good, bad or
indifferent: but a good college magazine may serve several useful purposes.
First a college magazine encourages
the students to practice writing by affording opportunities to budding authors
to see their compositions printed. A young man who will take little interest in
doing a set of composition exercises in class, will put forth his best efforts
when he knows that his composition will appear in print. It gives him a real
thrill to see something that he was written appearing as an article in a
printed magazine. To bring forth the best efforts, prizes are sometimes offered
for the best articles.
Next, a college magazine, well
edited, helps to foster what is called espirt decorps or college patriotism.,
It can be made to help the college students to realize that they are a united
body, however diverse may be their individual tastes and occupations. It
should, moreover, teach them to be proud of their college, loyal to its best
interests, and anxious to uphold its best tradition.
The college magazine, further, may
serve as a link between the present students and “the old boys” and help to
keep the latter in touch with their old college. As farmer students reads the
college news month by months, they will feel again something of old pride in
their place where they got their education and their interest in it will be
maintained. Sometimes it has been the college magazine that has led to the
starting of an “old boys’ association”, which gives monetary help to the
college. If a college has no magazine, these “old boys”, scattered about the country
and absorbed in their own occupations, are liable to forget their college, and
lose interest in its welfare.
To serve all these useful purposes
well, a college magazine must be carefully edited. Too often such magazines do
more harm than good, or are at best very poor productions, simply because the
editor does not take his work seriously. The editor should raise the standard
of the magazine by refusing all badly written contributions, and any that are
silly, in bad taste, or objectionable on other grounds. Better no magazine at
all than a worthless and silly production.
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