Outing . OTHER LANDS ARE MOVING IN ATHLETICS. HERE ARE 4,000 PARISIAN CLERKS IN A ROAD RACE vidual, for unless we allow at the outsetfor the personal equation we shall alwaysbe permitting an error to creep in thatmay entirely vitiate our conclusions. Aman tells you he is riding horseback forhis liver. Do you suppose that the boyof sixteen or seventeen desires a pony be-cause the riding will jolt his liver? Hedoesnt know he has a liver. Is the girlwho goes to the promenade at ten anddances every dance and intermission untilfive and then goes to a dawn tea doing itfor exercise? Does her sleepy-e


Outing . OTHER LANDS ARE MOVING IN ATHLETICS. HERE ARE 4,000 PARISIAN CLERKS IN A ROAD RACE vidual, for unless we allow at the outsetfor the personal equation we shall alwaysbe permitting an error to creep in thatmay entirely vitiate our conclusions. Aman tells you he is riding horseback forhis liver. Do you suppose that the boyof sixteen or seventeen desires a pony be-cause the riding will jolt his liver? Hedoesnt know he has a liver. Is the girlwho goes to the promenade at ten anddances every dance and intermission untilfive and then goes to a dawn tea doing itfor exercise? Does her sleepy-eyed chap-eron think its fun or could you convinceher that if she were twenty-five yearsyounger she would be doing it, too? A Princeton writer once described, ina letter written from England, the con-trast between athletics-to-win andathletics-for-fun, as follows: The difference in the attitude, bothof spectators and players, from ours canhardly be more plainly illustrated thanby comparing varsity football


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade, booksubjectsports, booksubjecttravel