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...sports, athletics once more are established on a sound basis. Baseball, track and crew may now start, assured that their season of practice will culminate in meeting opponents of similar status. The uncertainty as to the awarding of insignia forms a novel test of undergraduates' interest in exercise per se, for the men who have slaved through weeks of hated labor to wear the envied "H" will now be eliminated. Only those who enter these sports for the enjoyment or the benefit derived from them will be attracted. It is now up to the student body to prove that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UP TO THE STUDENTS | 2/20/1918 | See Source »

...grievance of American young men that they are considered infants by their elders until they have passed middle age is altogether too well founded. A young man's ability is a difficult thing to make recognized per se. This is especially true in so conservative a business as our national government, where we can point to few men of tender years holding positions of responsibility. We have not had too many William Pitts or Lord John Russells. An exception to this rule, however, is our Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt '04, who will speak on the Navy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: F. D. ROOSEVELT '04 | 1/14/1918 | See Source »

...sight of great building crashing, and brave firemen being overcome, and fair heroines on eleventh stories jumping into their anticipating arms. True, such luxuries are seldom realized. The end of the fire-seeking trail is generally a wood-shed or a chicken-house which some urchin has se alight. Fair heroines are scarce; and tall sky-scrapers refuse to burn except at uncertain intervals. Yet there is always hope of some great catastrophe, a second Chicago or Baltimore blaze; or perhaps even such a scene as the movies show on red films, while the orchestra pounds the bass...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIRE FLIES | 1/30/1917 | See Source »

...memory as a means instead of an end is a faculty--that is rarely used to qualify the accuracy of a person's memory per se. We are wont to esteem highly and without discrimination those whose powers of recollection are well nigh faultless, and yet of what merit is the mind that can only imitate and plagiarize? To store up mere facts and uncorrelated details is worse than useless. The natural limits of mental capacity are soon over-run, and there is no room to cultivate original thought and imagination. A machine's efficiency is determined by the ratio...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE CURSE OF MEMORY" | 12/7/1916 | See Source »

Arrangements are under way for se- curing a room in Cambridge to serve as Corps Headquarters. This room will also be used as a reference room in which the work of military flying corps may be studied in a practical way. Aeronautical journals of the United States, France, and England will be kept on file, as well as standard works on aviation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLYING CORPS MEETS TONIGHT | 3/24/1916 | See Source »

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