Word: us 
              
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 Dates: during 1900-1909 
         
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Something exists: however reckless and extravagant this statement seems, let us accept it provisionally and term that something ourselves. Man is a compound of a material part called the body, and an intangible part called the soul. The facts about the body are simple; the soul being invisible is only assumed to exist, first through its apparent effects, secondly through self-consciousness. There is but one form of self-consciousness to which we are not passive; we may feel pain or sensation, but we never say that we feel the will. It is always subjective and active...
...advice for the first-year student, deserves careful consideration. Both these articles are well conceived, and the same thing may be said of the other prose contributions. In "Some English Outskirts" the writer has caught the spirit of rural England; it is a pleasing ramble to which he invites us. Part II of. "The Sins of the Fathers" brings out the point of the story: the inheritance of morbid and maniacal impulses; the peculiar feature is that the girl's suicidal mania is developed by her lover's inherited morbid appetite for psychological analysis-an interesting point, skillfully worked...
...committee of men who have been in closest touch with athletic affairs is responsible for the suggestion. It is not a harebrained jump in the dark, but a carefully thought out method of cutting at the roots of the kind of student negligence that has brought down upon us a crusade against intercollegiate athletics...
...means of producing better understanding between Faculty and undergraduates, better unity among students, and as an aid to the Athletic Committee in making unnecessary the kind of curtailment to which we are all opposed. We must discuss and vote intelligently; but let no unfortunate demonstration come between us and the happy solution that appears to be in sight. The CRIMSON cannot urge too strongly the necessity of an unanimous expression in this matter and an attendance at the meeting that will leave no doubt of the students' interest in helping bring to a satisfactory close a situation that so closely...
...thank Mr. Whiting and all who have assisted him for what has been done for us, and assure him of a hearty welcome when he returns another year...