Word: broadly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...considerable merit. In the high-jump Fitts will be assisted by R. D. Gerould '24 and Malcolm Morse '24, who won their numerals last year and by Richmond Page '24, while C. B. S. Evans '22, C. J. Hamlin '23, Jenkins, Merrill, and Wansker will be candidates for the broad-jump...
...character. The impetus which the Conference received by the introduction of a detailed plan for the limitation of naval armaments started the deliberations forward at great speed. Within ten days great decisions affecting naval and far Eastern polices were reached and recorded. These decision meant the acceptance of certain broad but definite principles. The issues has been presented in such a way that the choice before the delegates was virtually one between Yes and No. In the study of the proposals there was of course some labor required, but it was not such as to consume much time...
...record broad-jump of 25 feet, 3 inches, made on July 23 in the Harvard-Yale-Oxford-Cambridge track meet by E. O. Gourdin 1L., was officially accepted as a new international record by the Intercollegiate Amateur Athletic Association of America at its meeting Monday night...
...impart to their students a love of art, literature, or music or a knowledge of science, philosophy or economics. The author urges, therefore, that many subjects hitherto known as "college subjects" be taught in the elementary schools. They need not be given in all their intricate complexity. The broad, fundamental ideas will suffice. In many cases, no doubt, these will supply incentive for further personal investigation. Thus will the youth gain a little better realization of his place in the world, a little truer idea of values; for education, after all, is glorified common sense...
...Shidehara, Japanese Ambassador to the United States, in his article published in our Daily, lays forth what purports to be Japan's policy in the Far East. We deem that it is of great importance that the American public should know the truth about the whole situation. Broad generalizations help us but little; We must resort to concrete facts. With this principle in mind, let us, examine some of the Ambassador's statements...