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...lectures before the Oregon Teachers' Association at Eugene, and on July 2 and 3 he will lecture at the State College of Washington at Pullman and will meet the Harvard Club of Spokane. From July 6 to 10 he will be at the Bellingham State Normal School, and from July 13 to 31 will lecture at the Summer School of the University of Washington, at Seattle. While in Seattle he will be entertained by the Harvard Club, whose secretary, Mr. D. B. Trefethen L. '01, is already making active preparations for Professor Hart's reception. Before sailing, Professor Hart will...
Glorified celestial existence is the final goal of most religions. In Northern Buddhism this is not the goal but an intermediate step in normal evolution between the human and the infinite consciousness...
...current number of the Yale Alumni Weekly, Dr. F. J. Born, medical examiner of the Yale gymnasium, states that "competitive games and sports should be indulged in by more of the normal, healthy students than now participate in them, because they result be an increase in the sertngth and degree of function of the heart and lungs." It is just this point that the CRIMSON has tried continually to emphasize this year, by urging a general participation in scrub contests, which are becoming more numerous and more popular every year. A move in the right direction was made...
...competed to the detriment of his courses? Not a whit. Doesn't it seem reasonable that a man who can keep off probation the year round, taking part in two sports, could as easily compete in three? Because sure as water rises to its own level man takes his normal exercise, and the gratifying result of this rule is only to divert a certain amount of this exercise into channels which in no way assist the University. It's a pity, a great pity, that so many Harvard defeats are shelved with the athletic rules of its own making...
There are no considerations of higher import than the just relations of capital and labor. The organization of capital, which is a normal and logical development of our times, should welcome reasonable laws which place wholesome restraints upon its activities, so that through competition or otherwise it will not be induced or forced to overstep the safeguards of industrial rights and block the highways of opportunity for the humblest citizen of the land. There can be no liberty without opportunity, and to the extent that opportunity is abridged, whether by the state or by cor- porate power, it is denial...