Word: broadly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...competed was the Penn Relay Carnival. At the last moment it was decided to make entries only in the special events, and not to have any relay teams representing the University compete. Gourdin, Harwood and Brown were the only men who made the trip to Philadelphia. Gourdin won the broad-jump, breaking his own record, and also the Harvard record; and Harwood tied for third in the pole-vault. Gourdin also placed fourth in the 100-yard dash...
Understand from Associated Press that you desire shot-put added to former schedule. Therefore suggest following events: 100-yard dash, 440-yard dash, 880-yard run, mile run, two-mile run, 120-yard high-hurdles, shot-put, hammer-throw, broad-jump, high-jump. Suggest Olympic rules govern meet, also suggest second places count in case of tie. FRED W. MOORE...
...Bound together in a common cause, quickened by a common aim, faithful to a noble trust, our universities and colleges are constantly calling with their bells throughout this broad land--calling to one another to serve the needs of the present time, and to prepare the way for generations yet to come," said President Lowell in speaking yesterday at the first formal assemblage of delegates at the University of Virginia centennial...
...economics, a dash of sociology, a salting of rhetoric and literature, a minute sprinkling of precious stones, creative listening, fine arts, and what not, and a very medium dose of languages, and come out quite the University concoction. Glimpses and vistas, not real understanding, are being recommended for the "broad" college course. The student is getting the merest taste of the elementals of everything, and dropping the threads where they begin. His thinking comes to a halt where it ought to be starting...
...becoming more democratic, inasmuch as "approximately thirty per cent of the students are working their way through; the Captains of the baseball team, the football team, the track team, and the basketball teams are all self-supporting men." Both speeches have to do with college democracy; one represents the broad outlook of a graduate, the other the narrower view of the undergraduate...