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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: - I do not wish to appear in the light of a faultfinder, but it seems to me that the college authorities are a little too parsimonius in the matter of lighting the college yard and buildings. Every evening that the moon is expected to appear, the lamps in the yard are left unlit. Now it very frequently happens that a rain or snow storm comes up, when the moon is entirely hidden, and the belated wanderer is left to feel his way through the slush or mud in the yard as best he may, trusting to the gods for guidance. In a college like Harvard it is nothing less than disgraceful that such a state of affairs should exist.

Again, all the lights in the halls of the college buildings are put out at twelve o'clock; and again the sense of feeling is brought into play to aid the weary prodigal in finding his key, then in finding his key-hole, and finally in combining the two so as to open his door. Need these thinge be?

INQUIRER.

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