‘3 NI WEEKLY BOATING PLAN SETTLED. Yale-Harvard-Cornell Race Finally Arranged. The plans for the coming boating sea- son were definitely settled at a confer- ence held in New York, Saturday after- noon, February 20. It was decided that the Yale-Harvard-Cornell race should be rowed at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., on June 24th or 25th, the decision being left to Harvard. It was also agreed to hold the race between the Freshman crews representing the three universi- ties on June 23d. The regatta commit- tee, which will govern these contests, will probably be composed of one man from each University. The referee will he selected later. This conference was held in conse- quence of correspondence which passed between Harvard and Cornell last week. In accordance with the agreement drawn up between the Yale and Har- vard Athletic managements, something over a week ago, in regard to the boat- ing plans for the coming season, Har- vard immediately took steps towards obtaining Cornell’s permission to allow Yale to become a third party to their race. A letter was received on Febru- ary 16 by the Cornell Navy Manage- ment, dated February 14, the very day upon which the Yale-Harvard agree- ment was signed, in which special at- tention was called to the following clause in the agreement: “Yale is will- ing to make a third party in the Har- vard-Cornell race at Poughkeepsie in 1897, if Harvard so arrange.” The letter then continued: ‘‘We therefore propose 10 you to admit Yale as a party to our race this year.’’ The entire freedom of Cornell to act in the matter just as she might see fit was fully and frankly recognized. Harvard undertook neither to urge nor advise. She did not claim that Cornell was in any way bound by obligation to Harvard or even in courtesy to Harvard to accept the prop- osition. The letter said: ‘“‘We know perfectly well that we have no right to ask this of you, and that even the most unselfish courtesy would not re- quire it of you.” The despatch of this letter from the Harvard Management was followed by the arrival of Capt. Goodrich of the Harvard crew in Ithaca. He held a consultation. with Commodore Murdock and Professor Wheeler of Cornell, which lasted over two hours, and finally an affirmative answer was drawn up by the Cornell Management. The exact wording of the reply follows: “We are in receipt of the proposal of the Harvard Boat Club that Yale be admitted to the Harvard-Cornell race this year. We cordially accept this proposal, and proffer the counter re- quest that the University of Pennsyl- vania and Columbia be admitted to the Same race. In case such an arrange- ment be made, the date, July 2 or June 25, will be acceptable to Cornell for the race,’’ The final decision was made at last Saturday’s conference, at which Captain Goodrich of Harvard, Professor B. I. Wheeler of Cornell, I. A. Cowles of Co- lumbia and Thomas Reathe of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania were present. Cornell’s reply to Harvard’s proposition was here considered and Mr. Goodrich stated that owing to Havard’s agree- ment with Yale, the proposed five-cor- nered race would be out of the ques- tion. The agreement for a Yale-Har- vard-Corneli race was then easily reached and the dates arranged as stat- ed above. Cornell later arranged to. row a race at Poughkeepsie with Columbia and the University of Pennsylvania, July 2. thn tdi wer Handball Club. Handball is the latest athletic sport to which Yale men have turned their attention and several very good play- ers have been discovered in the Uni- versity. A court has already been provided, located in the boxing room of the gymnasium, and it is the plan of the members of the club to hold tcurnaments sometime during the Spring term. Dr. W. G. Anderson, director of the gymnasium, is an earnest supporter of the game, and believes that im winter it will do much towards keeping the athletes, who are candidates for the regular teams, in good condition. At the meeting held to organize a regular club about forty undergradu- ates were present, and the following committee was elected to have charge of the permanent organization and constru:tion of the new court: W. R. Letcher, ’98, C. M. Gallup, ’97S., W. Noyes, ’98, EF. Crampton, 1900, C. A. . Burden, and H. G. Watson. Senior Awakening. (N. A. Smyth, ’97, in the Yale “ Lit.’’”) Common sense, then, must not rob us of these dreams. They should not van- ish as we pass into manhood, but grow more real. Our purpose should grow | firmer with the years. Experience may teach us where our bias lies: it is a blind guide if it would put a limit around our effort. It should teach not the confines of our cell, but the loop-_ hole of escape. If the purpose of the. boy had remained strong as he passed into manhood, the rock would sooner or later have yielded to his strength. We are weak not in power but in pur- pose. We are limited not from with- out, but from within. The real tether is twisted of three strands, lack of faith, lack of purpose, lack of deter-. mination; lack of power is but the. combination of these three. There is much truth in the remark of the great pessimist that the more SO- ciable a man is the more intellectually poor and generally vulgar you will find him. Examine those you know and see if much of their sociability is not a mere huddling together to find in each other’s company a warmth which their own intellectual rags and tatters are not able to provide. But it is with a more positive effect of mixing with so- ciely that we are concerned now. . Why is it that most of us lose SO early that aspiration for greatness, that yearning to surpass ourselves and oth- ers, which is one of the noblest forces in humanity? It is because the voice of the world around us—the common sense—deafens us to the higher call. True, the association of men with men lies at the base of all the world’s ad- vance. Man calls to man in notes of encour- agement and stimulation, yet there are other louder tones that distract and re- strain. Take heed that you hear the fainter call. The voice of humanity urges us On, and in the same breath it holds us back. In the pleasures of com- panionship our dreams fade away. As we mix with men our eyes foilow theirs, till we are all staring vacantly at one another instead of at some far-off goal. We seek not our dream of greatness but the esteem of our fellows. Our education instead of development of power becomes an endeavor to pick up a superficial culture wherewith we may make ourselves fit to be talked to at some social function. We try to amass information rather than to learn to think. Read the magazines of to- day and see how gifted men are, writ- ing not to achieve an ideal of greatness but to truckle to the popular gullet. Dainty fancies and spicy sentences, but not a trace of honest, earnest effort for what is really worthy! In what ball- room ever originated anything but pet- ty diplomacy or in the companionship of the saloon what but ‘peanut poli- tics?” “Find me your great man and I will show you one who is much alone” —an old truth—and no less true that in mingling overmuch with others we are becoming incapable of greatness. These old dreams of ours! Many a bitter struggle they have caused us, and will cause yet if we cling to them. Many a man will think us moody and unpleasant, for discouragement and dis- appointment are the pacemakers of an aspiring soul. Much pleasure they are to deprive us of, for who ever was truly great that did not work? Yet they hold up before us something nobler, more worthy of us than mere pleasure. The voices of those around us, our own im- mediate comfort, the overwhelming sense of our limitations, bid us wake from our dreams. Aye, wake we must, Sooner or later—hbut wake not to sad remembrance, but to fashion the reality after the pattern of our dream.