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With this issue our labors for this term are over. We leave our cold sanctum with a hearty cheer for the CRIMSON and turn our attention to thoughts of vacation and home. We would that all students could share our pleasure in Christmas anticipations, but we suppose some few are compelled to remain in Cambridge, and seek mental strength from the library, and physical satisfaction from the Christmas dinner at Memorial. For the Jester and our associate the Advocate, we would wish all the blessings of the season and renewed strength of wit and literary acumen. We rejoice...
...debt and its expenses are increasing year by year. We feel that appeal has been made on the purse of the students until further aid from that source cannot be expected. The alumni of the college should feel that they still are Harvard men in all athletic contests. They share in the regret and glory of Harvard's defeats and victories, and an appeal to them for money should carry with it a sense of obligation...
...does no drilling of any importance, but whenever there is any prospect of war, as in the present crisis in the East, it resumes its active discipline; and the university has just suspended most of the lectures temporarily, in order to allow the Phalanx to get its share of active service. The Government supplies arms and drill officers; and, according to the latest news, is having some difficulty in keeping the "boys" from marching off to the frontier. Many of the instructors belong to the Phalanx and are as enthusiastic about it as the students themselves...
About 2,700 tickets were sold for the Yale-Wesleyan foot-ball game on the polo grounds, New York. Yale's share of receipts...
...their studies. Both mind and body will soon be engaged, the former in the intellectual and the latter in the physical. It is but natural to expect that the more intellectual arts and sciences will be absorbed in unobtrusive silence, and that their achievement will not attract any notable share of public attention, and that base-ball and boat racing will be studied with a fervor which cannot but trumpet the accomplishments of their classic followers to the notice and admiration of an expectant world. Local pride leans more kindly toward the victories of brawn than towards those of mind...