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Subscriptions to the Smith College Monthly for the year 1904-5 are payable in advance. Names of present subscribers will be put on the list for next year unless notification to the contrary is sent to the Business Manager before October 1st, 1904.

unreasonable to suppose that his foreign point of view may render it impossible for him to perceive the real issues in the question, for Professor Münsterberg is thoroughly imbued with German methods and ideals, and speaks, as he says in his preface, from the German point of view. This fact may interfere some

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THE SMITH COLLEGE MONTHLY is published at Northampton, Massachusetts, on the 15th of each month, during the year from October to June, inclusive. Terms, $1.50 a year, in advance. Single numbers, 20 cents. Contributions may be left in the Monthly box, outside room 11, Seelye Hall. Subscriptions may be sent to Isabella Rachel Gill, 9 Belmont Avenue, Northainpton.

Articles designed for the literary departments for a particular issue must be submitted by the twenty-second of the month preceding.

Entered at the Post Office at Northampton, Massachusetts, as second class matter.

GAZETTE PRINTING COMPANY, NORTHAMPTON, MASS.

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Subscriptions to the Smith College Monthly for the year 1904-5 are payable in advance. Names of present subscribers will be put on the list for next year unless notification to the contrary is sent to the Business Manager before October 1st, 1904.

unreasonable to suppose that his foreign point of view may render it impossible for him to perceive the real issues in the question, for Professor Münsterberg is thoroughly imbued with German methods and ideals, and speaks, as he says in his preface, from the German point of view. This fact may interfere some

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butions may be left in the Monthly box, outside room 11, Seelye Hall. Sud-
scriptions may be sent to Isabella Rachel Gill, 9 Belmont Avenue, North-
ampton.

Articles designed for the literary departments for a particular issue must
be submitted by the twenty-second of the month preceding.

Entered at the Post Office at Northampton, Massachusetts, as second class matter.

GAZETTE PRINTING COMPANY, NORTHAMPTON, MASS.

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Professor Münsterberg, a native of Germany, who has been for some years the occupant of the chair of Experimental Psychology at Harvard University, in his book entitled "American Traits" has offered to the American public an interesting and valuable criticism of American education, scholarship, and culture. Professor Münsterberg has had the opportunity of becoming familiar with one of the chief centers of higher education in the United States, and of coming into contact with the best scholarship and highest culture that this country affords, consequently his observations are well-founded and instructive.

The fact that he looks with the eyes of a foreigner undoubtedly helps him to see clearly and impartially the external condition of education and of scholarship. When, however, he seeks to explain and to discover the causes of this condition, it is not unreasonable to suppose that his foreign point of view may render it impossible for him to perceive the real issues in the question, for Professor Münsterberg is thoroughly imbued with German methods and ideals, and speaks, as he says in his preface, from the German point of view. This fact may interfere some

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