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Word: aptly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Princeton freshmen have discovered many faults in the university team during the scrimmages of the past week, which must be corrected if the team is to make a good showing in the big games. The men show a tendency towards over-aggressiveness and fumbling which is apt to prove disastrous. Hammond and Brown will probably be the regular ends and a great deal is expected of them both in every respect save forward passing. The tackle positions will surely be held by Phillips and Ballin whereas the final choices for guards are very uncertain, Heyniger and Longstreth being the most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GAMES BY YALE AND PRINCETON | 10/18/1913 | See Source »

...regular daily exercise, who derive the most direct stimulus from it, and to whom the college most owes an accommodation which indirectly redounds to its own advantage in their increased efficiency in later years. The institution at Cambridge is a large one a 'university' more truly than we are apt to remember, and the misconception of Harvard athletics which is most common arises from ignorance of the custom whereby nearly every undergraduate 'does something' in the way of regular exercise. This places a premium on the use of a gymnasium that is more than ordinary. Almost alone...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 10/15/1913 | See Source »

...interested in track work, the attendance was 119. Captain W. A. Barron, Jr., '14, presided and talked briefly on the importance of fall track work both in the development of the team and of the individual. With football holding the centre of interest, enthusiasm in the fall season is apt to be much less than it should be, unless everyone takes it upon himself to see to it that he keeps steadily at work. W. M. Rand '09, captain of the 1909 track team pointed out the need and value of headwork and brainwork in connection with all forms...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MANY ATTEND TRACK MEETING | 9/26/1913 | See Source »

...American Indians and Mr. Eschman's clear exposition of the operatic situation in Germany which bids fair to assume international importance. Then there is critical discussion of four operas recently produced in this country, one of them by an American. Mr. Hall's article on M. Aubert is particularly apt in that the first American performances of his opera "La Foret Bleue" are now taking place in this city...

Author: By A. T. Davison jr., | Title: CURRENT "MUSICAL REVIEW" | 3/20/1913 | See Source »

Those who visit the exhibition of Oriental paintings at the Fogg Museum and do not already have some knowledge of Chinese and Japanese art, are apt not to appreciate the beauty and the value of the collection. The opportunity offered this afternoon to learn about the significance of these pictures from one who has given the subject attentive study should appeal to all who are interested in art or in the civilization of the East. Mr. Warner has spent much time in the East and will return next year to China, sent by the Archeological Association of America to look...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MR. LANGDON WARNER. | 1/9/1913 | See Source »

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