It always requires a great deal of temerity for a college professor to try to show the way to a group of practical minded men and women, and when I agreed to talk before a convention of music supervisors I was forcibly reminded of a retort that a Pittsburgh boy is said to have made to Billy Sunday, He had just been showing Billy the way to the Pittsburgh post-office, and when he learned that the sermon that night was to be on Way to Heaven, he said somewhat doubtfully: What? You are going to try to show the way to heaven when you don't even know the way to the post-office ! I think that there is much to be said in favor of the boy's point of view, and yet I feel that it is often helpful to approach the practical problems of the public school by way of the college. Those of us whose business it is to teach in the colleges are peculiarly aware of the immense task that still lies ahead of public school education along the line before we may look forward to the day when freshman classes will bring to us young men whose cultural background has been satisfactory. An instructor in freshman English was recently taken to task by an irate parent on account of his son's failure to pass in English, whereupon the instructor himself became somewhat irate, and wrote back: Has your son ever heard you express a broadly rational conception, ever joined you in any fine sport of the mind? Have you brought him up on noble legends, read Shakespeare to him before bedtime? When he awoke, did his eyes rest on beautiful pictures? Did you ever take him to an orchestral concert, or to a really good play? Your son's face and actions and speech have already answered these questions for me. You have stuffed his mind with dull platitudes, have done everything that you could to convince him of the impiety of original thought. You have crammed his soul with ugly chromos, jazz, movies, yellow journals, and sensational magazines. You have addressed your son every day for eighteen years in ungrammatical, illchosen, and fumbling words. Yet you do not blush to toss him to me with a 'Here! Make a scholar of him!' The indictment of this particular parent is unhappily an indictment of America as a whole, of its failure to provide the average boy and girl early in life with the love of the finest things in life. This failure, in so far as it concerns musical education, seems to depend in the first place on the lack of a clearly defined goal. We are apt to try to make progress without a clear enough vision of the end to be attained. It is very much as in the case of the negro who had sat down on a hornet's nest, and who was rapidly retreating down the road when someone asked him where he was going. I-e said: I'm not going anywhere. I am just getting away from the place where I was. If we are going to do more than just get away from the place where we were in music, we must keep on redefining our purposes, and keep trying to think out each particular problem with reference to the final goal that we wish to attain. I should like before launching into my subject proper to bring up one or two points in regard to this goal, as they will have a constant bearing on the statements that I shall make later.