Word: deem
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...this case for two reasons: first, to let those who may have heard of the matter know that Harvard undergraduates do not stand for this sort of thing. (Had not due punishment already been administered, we should not hesitate to publish the names of the men whom we deem so misrepresentative of Harvard sportsmanship). And, in the second place, we wish to point out the far-reaching effects of what may have been thought at the time something in the nature of a care-free "party...
...travel after graduation or by establishing travelling fellowships." By vote of the President and Fellows, the income of the Frederick Sheldon Fund is to be assigned, not in scholarships of fixed amounts, but "on recommendation to the Committee from the various Departments and Schools,...as the Committee shall deem most expedient for purposes of investigation or study either in this country--outside Harvard University--or abroad...
...they start out and climb till noon. This is usually long enough to scale a mountain in the Tyrol. Before starting, the sky line is scanned closely. Clouds from the Italian horizon are a bad omen. Not until the clouds have parted from the mountain peaks, do the natives deem it safe to set out. The climbing is difficult and often dangerous. On the mountain sides are to be found curious rock-capped pinnacles of clay towering many feet into the air. The rain and snow has washed away all the clay except that directly under the rock...
...Yale and Princeton regular attendance at morning chapel is compulsory, and every year the senior class at Yale votes to have the custom continued. This shows that men who attend prayers regularly deem it worth the effort. While we do not approve of and would not for a moment advocate compulsory attendance at Harvard, we do wish to call the attention of the University to the fact that a short service is held in Appleton Chapel every morning at 8.45. There is some justification for this, for, as a rule, less than 100 men are scattered about the vacant pews...
...which this should be determined is this: the visiting teams are our guests, and as such are entitled to the courteous treatment from us which the name of host implies. A fair way to decide just what this means is for us to stop and consider what we would deem courteous treatment were we on the side of the visiting team, and then we should accord such treatment to our guests. "Rattling" a visiting team is unsportsmanlike, for it is clearly taking an unfair advantage. This usually takes the form of organized cheering at times which the cheer leaders know...