Word: comments
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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With regard to the game which the nine played with Pennsylvania, we feel that the harsh comment which has been given the team is, in the main deserved...
...press of other matters has prevented any earlier comment upon the action of the Corporation in prohibiting the use of University buildings for political party purposes. Sufficient reason for the action we have not been able tofind. "Political party purposes" is an ambiguous phrase: if it is interpreted as "political machinery," the Corporation is right; if it is interpreted as "political education," it seems to us that the Corporation is distinctly wrong. It is conceivable that political clubs formed by students should degenerate into the tools of political bosses, and, if so, their abolition would be commended. The simple fact...
...avail themselves? There would be love and war, or, if no deeds worth celebrating offered themselves (unhappily Horace's saying is sometimes reversed, and heroic men as often fail to the bard as the bard to them), there would only be love. I merely put the case as a comment on the assertion we sometimes hear that if we have no poetry it is the fault of the poets, since the material always abundantly exists in human nature. Undoubtedly it does,- the passions and desires, the loves, hopes and despairs of men are the raw material,- but there are periods...
After little unfavorable comment on the recent inconsistency of the Faculty with regard to the nineteenth of April, the Advocate in its editorials goes on to a consideration of some important difficulties of the present athletic situation. The gist of the writer's idea is that even if the authorities are convinced of the evil of the present system of athletics, they should proceed carefully in choosing a remedy, lest they crush the symptom and leave the disease untouched. Above all they should beware of weakening the main source of the old "college feeling," which the intensely individualistic tendencies...
...action of the Corporation in yielding Jarvis Field to the Tennis Association has created much comment. It will be generally regretted that football games will have to be held on Soldiers Field, but the inconvenience, experienced from the distance, will not be exceedingly large and will grow constantly smaller as we accustom ourselves to the change. On the other hand, the Tennis Association needed ground badly; the number of courts has been, in the past, inadequate to the demand for them, and this has hampered, and even wholly prevented, exercise by many students. We regard it, in any case...