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Outside the typographical improvements which include a shortened reading line, the featuring of the "leader," and trimmed edges, the reading matter is of exceptional interest. A more straight-forward, sensible and well-written article than "The Crew Coach" by W. H. L. Bell '04, is seldom if ever seen in an undergraduate publication. His view may not be the correct one but the manner in which he writes will find it many supporters; and it is well worth reading. Of the other contributions, "The Skipper of Halibut Bay," a story by C. H. Brown '05, and "The Greater Birth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Monthly. | 9/29/1904 | See Source »

...attitude of the average man of today is one of indifference. The person who buttonholes his acquaintances and inquires about their hopes of future life is shunned like the Ancient Mariner. Among clergymen the subject is seldom referred to except from the pulpit, and even the daily press is silent. Only on occasions of sickness and sorrow, and at the approach of death, does the though arise, "Of what am I, and where do I go?" It is often the case that the older one grows the less fixed becomes the interest in immortality...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LECTURE BY DR. OSLER | 5/19/1904 | See Source »

...hauled and will be launched in a few days. Beginning last Monday, the University crew squad has been rowing in barges. Three provisional eights have been maintained with little change during the week, the remainder of the squad rowing in pair-oars. The stroke has been kept very slow, seldom above 20 to the minute, and some improvement in the direction of a gradual and steady recover is already evident...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Crew Orders. | 3/28/1904 | See Source »

Modern industrial conditions have created a social gap by grouping numbers of men as employees in large industrial establishments, cut off from knowledge of their employers and from acquaintance with them. It is seldom that the owners of such establishments know their own employees, or are known by them. Under such conditions it is as natural that there should be jealousies and misunderstandings between the groups thus separated as it is that there should be sectional and international jealousies where there is little mutual intercourse and acquaintance. It is toward the closing up of this social gap that all effective...

Author: By T. N. Carver., | Title: President Eliot as a Social Thinker. | 3/21/1904 | See Source »

...year. The coach on the field will be selected as in previous years and will have nearly the same authority. The committee of seven is too large to undertake to handle the actual coaching and should not attempt it, as nothing but confusion would result. They will probably meet seldom and operate solely as a check or judicial body to help out the coach, the captain, and their advisers, in making their plans in their relations with the Athletic Committee, and in whatever difficulties they may find themselves and need assistance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GRADUATE FOOTBALL MEETING | 12/17/1903 | See Source »

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