Word: certain
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...undergraduates. Such a condition can have arisen only because the body in question did not represent in enough detail the various phases of undergraduate activity. Although there can be no doubt that the men who did compose the Council were the most representative, it is by no means certain that there were enough of them to act wisely and justly on behalf of the entire student body. This consideration points to a larger membership as necessary if the Council is to command respect and consideration for its decisions...
This afternoon will afford the last of very few opportunities the Freshman class will have had this season to evince its interest in the score at New Haven on Saturday. Furthermore, every member of the class cannot but appreciate to a certain degree the amount of drudgery necessary to bring the team to the eve of the Yale game with only one defeat. And thirdly, the 1914 Freshman team has a high criterion to emulate: 1912 broke the long line of Freshman football defeats by Yale, 1913 proved equal to this standard, and now it remains...
...feels confident that the advantages offered to members are as great as ever, and has consequently sent to those men who have not yet joined reminders of this fact. It seems that thoughtlessness is probably the reason why a great many undergraduates have not become members, for it is certain that there is in the University a large number of men who can afford to do so, but who have not yet taken the trouble. The CRIMSON sincerely hopes that those who are able to join will do so at once, for no University institution deserves more generous and widespread...
...fact that there are to be no Freshman games should not deter candidates for the 1914 team from entering the meet. Handicaps will equalize the advantage of experience, and every good performance makes more certain a place on the team...
...those students who are the most able in the field which it represents. To fulfill its purpose any course should be open to all men who are qualified to profit by it. As explained in our editorial of October 13, the fact that undergraduates are expected to maintain in certain advanced work a standard beyond their knowledge, limits the usefulness of such courses by excluding men who are dependent upon high marks. The CRIMSON feels that it is possible to broaden the field of study by marking upon progress rather than attainment...