THE college begins today a new year of work, and in a few weeks the midyear examinations will come. There are but six months before Class Day, when Ninety Three will have passed on and become nothing but a name. To seniors the six months of college life that remain are but a short time to finish the work for which four years have been devoted, - four years that at the best have been short. To the freshman, unconscious and heedless of the vast field of opportunities spread before him four years seem a long period, but to the senior who has learned by experience those opportunities and who, looking back on them, sees where he has improved them and where he has let them pass, the time seems very short. After all, four years are none too long a period in which to learn the lessons the college offers, for books do not form the only means of education here. In the six months left it is for us to renew our work with greater energy and the strong purpose to improve every opportunity toward the development of the broad and intellectual college man.
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