Word: thinge
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: -The elevated railroad boom has set in, if we may believe what recently appeared in a Boston paper, and every man at Harvard wants to rejoice that the street cars which are now supposed to run [?] between Boston and Cambridge, are to be a thing of the past. For, who is there, that has never undergone the agony of sitting, half crushed-or, rather, owing to the unfortunate abundance of Cambridge females, of standing in the cold, crowded car, and peering frantically through the darkness in a vain attempt to discover the yard, which one never seems...
...class; and that whereas in 1874,60 per cent of the freshmen roomed in the yard, but 38 per cent. room there today The reason for this is, we think, the increasing eagerness with which any room in a college building is sought for. It is not an uncommon thing for a man to keep a room during his entire course, and for him then to hand it down to a friend as a precious legacy. The friend. In turn, leaves it to his friend, who also bequeaths it to a third. Under these circumstances, the freshman has very little...
There is undoubtedly something repugnant in a blue book, the mere sight of one is apt to excite our animosities; they have an effect upon us something akin to that produced by a Yale-Harvard foot ball match-they dampen our ardor. However, like many another thing here at Harvard, they are a necessity, and we have no choice but to support the book stores at this period of the year by a liberal patronage in blue books. Someone is made happy, at any rate. Let us not be so selfish as to want to take away this pleasure...
Again it is said that the Tariff stimulates over-production. but it is a very difficult thing to say that we have over-production. This is said to be the cause of hard times, but it is in fact hard times that often causes this overproduction. America has no monopoly of hard times. Free Trade countries suffer as much as we. The Tariff, therefore, cannot be charged with this common evil. If we remove this protection to our industries, we make America the dumping ground for Europe's surplus manufactures. Protection is antagonistic to commerce, we are told...
...Tariff yields too much revenue, is the cry now. But we have a debt to pay, and the most profitable thing the nation can do is to pay this debt. And even if we have a surplus revenue, it would not be the best thing to remove the duties. States are complaining of the difficulty of raising means to support their government, the cry even comes from so rich a state as New York. Let this surplus then, be distributed by some fair apportionment among the several states. In closing the lecturer thanked the audience for their kind attention during...