Word: thereinlies
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...Saturdays CRIMSON we published the programme of the benefit to the University Boat Club, which is to be given on the twenty-seventh of next month. As therein stated, the enterprise is the result of hearty co-operation on the part of the various class and university teams, and we feel sure that the students at large will show their appreciation of the work involved in this movement in a most substantial manner. The exhibition will give men such a chance to show visitors the real methods and results of our gymnasium work as has never previously been given...
From Mass., with its lines of cruel forms flanked on either side by an incongruous mass of broken chairs and desks, to Harvard and the funeral blackness therein contained, to Sever with its shiny but hard hearted benches, to our Laboratories with their curious devices for holding students, as it were, in situ for an hour at a time, - through all the weary round constantly the observer's wonder increases at the conditions under which existence can make even a partially successful contest with extinction. There are three or four main classes into which these seating facilities may be divided...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - There appeared in yesterday's CRIMSON an editorial referring to a petition, the aim of which is to make boxing cheaper for the students interested therein. It opposed such a measure on the ground that it ensured a favor only to "many students" and not to the university at large. This is true, but it must be remembered that the success of this attempt would give more men the enjoyment of sparring. Practice of this kind is, as all other gymnasium exercise, merely a recreation for the mind, but I cannot understand why it should...
...editorial of Saturday would read over once more, carefully, - curbing his excitement as much as possible, - the article in the Nation that so much aroused his anger. If he will do so, it seems to me that he cannot fail to see that he has grossly misrepresented the views therein expressed. And if he thinks it over a little, it seems to me that he will find it rather difficult conscientiously to deny any of the facts therein stated, however much he may differ as to the conclusions drawn...
...issue of yesterday appeared an article on "College Education in Business Life," and with the sentiments expressed therein, we, not only as students of a large and far advanced university, but also as those who would see all businesses and occupations elevated and ennobled by intellectual training, must all agree. That education, if properly used, and properly and modestly esteemed, will give both greater power and greater pleasure to business men, as well as to the literati, is undeniable. The question, however, takes at first sight a slightly different phase, when we consider whether or not the education at professional...