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Reports from Cornell scouts rate Dartmouth very highly, and Dobie with his usual caution declared that the dope favored the Green team to win. However, in view of Dobie's past predictions, this statement is a pretty certain indication of a Cornell victory. Dartmouth will give the Red and White their first real test, since Rutgers and Colgate, ordinarily among the leaders in intercollegiate football, have been represented by very mediocre teams this fall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ON OTHER GRIDIRONS | 11/3/1920 | See Source »

...true, may express their feelings with more or less freedom, on international as well as on domestic matters; but with public dignitaries the case is different. Their acts (official and unofficial) receive greater weight than those of private persons, and should be governed with a greater degree of caution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A TIMELY REMINDER. | 4/2/1920 | See Source »

There are serious times ahead. Timid messages of caution or good-will are past. The Allies have had our sympathy and moral support for the last two years, but the righteous opportunity has come for us to change our attitude. From now on our every element of strength should be concentrated on the task of suppressing a military power that has long lost regard for the most fundamental and humane rights of other peoples. Sacrifices by American citizens must be made and they will be made readily and joyfully. Yet the sooner the American manufacturer, banker, professor, business...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A STATE OF WAR | 4/3/1917 | See Source »

...were somewhat obscure to our ancestors. Who knows what may yet await the student, perchance at Herculaneum, if he is far-sighted enough to prepare himself for future prospects by labor with the Classics that we have? The great archaeological conquests of the last fifty years, when used with caution, permit us to re-create more vividly than our forerunners the environment in which the masterpieces of letters were produced and assist us in the solution of certain distraught questions in the history of literature. Both the investigation of the papyri and the application of archaeology to literature have...

Author: By Professor C. R. post., | Title: OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE STUDENT OF CLASSICS | 3/9/1916 | See Source »

...outlook for business for the first four months of 1916 is in striking contrast to that prevailing this time last year. There are spots where much caution and conservatism yet remain, and the influence of high prices for the future further accentuates this caution because dealers feel that high prices will curtail buying by the consumer. There are other sections where the apprehension caused by the war still hangs on. Broadly speaking, it may be said that the spirit of optimism and hopefulness prevails to a degree that has not been apparent for nearly a decade and the general expectation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BUSINESS OUTLOOK. | 1/12/1916 | See Source »

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