Word: enjoyable
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Major Henry Lee Higginson '55 expressed the hope that the entering class would enjoy the life in the University and grow to be active men. It is a lamentable state of affairs when men have no definite goal towards which they are striving. You should strive and achieve success but remember that success does not depend upon money. The three essentials of a successful life are knowledge, application, and character. The world is looking for experts, men who do not waste their time, character, or money...
...magnitude of his work. Not only is he a deep-thinking philosopher, but he possesses that rare power of making others think. Not only is he a true scholar, but he is a great teacher with the power to make philosophy a vivid and vital study for all who enjoy the pleasure of his instruction...
...proposal: that the space now used for billiard tables be turned into a swimming pool, a pool which even larger than that at the Y. M. C. A., can be of service not only to candidates for the swimming team, but for all Union members who wish to enjoy it. This tank is as yet only a proposal, its future has not been actually determined, but we wish to emphasize the good effects which we think will result from it. It will help the swimming team, and encourage swimming in general. It will make membership in the Union even more...
...movement to establish closer relations between the University and the Boston Opera House, whereby students may better enjoy the advantages of the Opera, has been started under the leadership of E. F. Hanfstaengl '09. Mr. Hanfstaengl's idea is to make the connection between Harvard and the Opera one such as exists in Germany, in which university students are enabled to attend the Opera at reduced rates. The value of the Opera in rounding out a man's general education is universally recognized, and such a plan would be advantageous to both parties...
...decide. All that the CRIMSON wishes to emphasize is that we have the extraordinary advantage of a first-class opera in Boston, and that in some way the University must assume its true position behind it, in order that the students and professors be enabled to enjoy it, for our own good, and for the good of the opera...