Young Harvard, as reported in the CRIMSON, does not seem to share Miss Pankhurst's feeling that religion is the hope of the world. The CRIMSON opposes the building of a chapel as a war memorial on the ground that the college religious service no longer plays any part in the lives of a vast majority of students (which is true enough), nor is likely to become any more important in the future. It thinks a neglected chapel would be an ignominious tribute. If thinks a building which will be "a constant, active reminder of the ideal which it represents is the only memorial worth considering," and it speaks up for a memorial gymnasium.
There is quite a bit more to life than Youth thinks of, but in due time it finds out. E.S. Martin in "Life".
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