Word: deal
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...history, economics, government, and science are equally good as preparation for legal or medical work. Thus the folly of attempting to steal a march by warping one's College course for professional ends is plain. It make little difference what a man studies in College. It makes a great deal of difference how well he studies...
...boards and follow up aggressively, but leave most of the shooting to the centres. Rice and Thacher, the University wings, though perhaps not quite as fast as Gould and Armour, handle their sticks a little better. Thacher has been coached to pass out to the centres a great deal, and follows the puck up to the goal pretty closely, often scoring on rebounds in practice. Rice has developed rapidly for the other wing, and is an accurate shot from the boards...
...much the affair of candidates for the College degree as of anyone else. It is equally an affair of their parents, many of whom, as suggested in the CRIMSON'S editorial, come from a great distance to witness the graduation exercises. Class Day gives a great deal of pleasure and means much, but witnessing the presentation of the degree means still more, to those who send us here. It means a kind of reward for their care, sacrifice perhaps, and expense in our education. It is a neglect of such needs as this which fosters prejudice in the minds...
...half-course on English and American literature since 1890, which is announced by the English Department, will interest a great many students, both within and within the department. The complaint is often heard that college courses deal too much with the past and too little with the present, and some reformers-- as the genial "Uncle Dudley" did a year ago,-- nonchalantly propose the abolition of many or all such courses. They class all thought of the past as useless learning; and forget that a large amount of intellectual capital which it would be prodigal to waste has been saved...
...great deal of credit is due to all concerned for the intelligent manner in which the work has been done, in spite of the great handicap which the present building and equipment has placed upon it. Practically all that was hoped of this new system has been realized, while the professional pessimists who opposed its introduction have not as yet been heard from. The fact that the Harvard authorities themselves who advised against Princeton's trying the plan are now preparing to take it up is proof of the practical and useful way in which it has worked...