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SEX IN EDUCATION.

take the task of special and appropriate co­education, in such a way as to give the two sexes a fair chance, which moans the best chance, and the only chance it ought to give or will ever give, without an endowment, ad­ditional to its present resources, of from one to two millions of dollars; and it probably would require the larger rather than the smaller sum. And this I say advisedly. By which I mean, not with the advice and con­sent of the president and fellows of the col­lege, but as an opinion founded on nearly twenty years personal acquaintance, as an instructor in one of the departments of the university, with the organization of instruc­tion in it, and upon the demands which physi­ology teaches the special and appropriate education of girls would make upon it. To make boys half-girls, and girls half-boys, can never be the legitimate function of any col­lege. But such a result, the natural child of identical co-education, is sure to follow the training of a college that has not the pecuni­ary means to prevent it. This obstacle is of