HUC PICTOR) >ur Turkey-Trot and Other Activities In keeping with the policy of the Collegian in covering activities HUC in a more clear and personal manner, we are presenting an i-witness account of the Turkey-Trot held last month at St. John s ill, as well as pictures depicting other activities ctnd scene. Glee Club sings—Miss Garbrick whistles, Student Cooperation— Close Together Saul, another Gregory Peck? The Men’s Glee Club giving out with “Honey.” Fedock stages a stick-up HAZLETON COLLEGIAN I 1 lAI A smile with every swing, The Jitter Bugs take over, Chow-line after Pottsville game. REVIEW Delegates at Pottsville Conference STUDENT HELPS By Mr. R. N. Krecker This is the second in a series of articles which are designed to assist the students of the local Center in the achievement of their academic objectives. The following suggestions are intended to supplement those given in the first article of this series, and they will be of greatest help to the students who clip them from this sheet and keep them in their note books for easy reference. Some students have a misconcep tion of the educational process. They feel that it is a process of infusion in which the instructor is the main per former rather than being a process of absorption in which the student takes the initiative. Education is merely an opportunity, not a promise. What the student gets out of his edu cation depends upon what he puts into it. Study is hard work, but the rewards it brings in knowledge and ability furnish an ever-present in centive. In this column no “open sesame” will be offered, but sugges tions will be made that can improve study efficiency. Absences and Tests On the average, every absence from class reduces a student’s success in examinations as measured by his grade. A monetary loss of approxi mately $1.25 to each student who misses one fifty minute class. This loss is now probably higher in the light of higher prices. The student should also devote himself to the various tests as they are given and understand that they are intended to reveal to himself the degree of adequency of his prepara tion quite as much as to the in structor. Reading is not study. Study may be defined as the appli cation of effort necessary to acquire and assimilate the ideas presented in the reading material. Reading is only the first step of study. The student may acquire ideas by reading, but to study he must assi milate these ideas, i. e,, make them a part of himself so that he can ex plain and apply them. The student must grasp, thus, ideas and reconstruct them for him self, so that they will be whole and complete in his mind in terms of his own vocabulary. Learining Factual Matter One learns the printed page in part by reading it, but chiefly by re calling the content. Indefinitely, rereading such ma terial does not fix it in one’s mind. Understanding the material is not learning it. The red, white, and blue will never fade if we act White, overcome the Blues, and give the Red nothing to harp on.