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The address of the committee appointed to report on the University Club project should obtain a large number of replies by letter. There are many men in the University who have definite views on the subject, whose opinions would be of great assistance to the committee in their work of canvassing student opinion. Such men should not hesitate to write briefly what they think. For the benefit of the large number of men who would like simply to say that they are in favor of the plan, blue-books will be placed tomorrow morning at Memorial Hall, the Foxcroft Club, and Leavitt and Peirce's, and one will be in the CRIMSON office this evening.

It must be borne in mind that the effort of the committee at present is not to create a sentiment in favor of the proposed club, except so far as the project commends itself. What they are trying to get at now is what the members of the University actually think of the plan. The latter has been well stated by a graduate interested in the movement in these words: "We aim simply at giving a definite amount of convenience for a definite annual sum; we don't dream of manufacturing sociability; but we believe that if eight hundred or more men find a University club worth ten dollars a year to them, its social influence will work unconsciously-as it should."

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