Word: disappeared
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Take black which stands for death and gun-powder and printer's ink. And orange which stands for gold, the root of all evil. Princeton's flag must disappear before the march of civilization...
President Hibben of Princeton has expressed the hope in his annual report that paid coaches in college athletics will soon disappear. He maintains that athletics are suffering from an over-organized system of coaching, and that he believes that more responsibility should be placed on team captains. "If undergraduates were released from unnatural domination of their sports by graduate coaches, intercollegiate sport would be liberated from the abnormal incubus of a superimposed system which tends to make puppets of the players. In order that men may be resourceful in time of emergency they must be schooled...
This column is devoted daily to the expressing of thoughts and opinions from undergraduate viewpoints. Much of its value and usefulness to the student body would immediately disappear if the thoughts expressed here were those of University authorities. As the students of the University have the privilege of expressing their own opinions, so have the professors--and this is just and proper...
President Lowell emphasized the points brought out by Dean Gay and Professor Parker. "Knowledge you get in college," he said, "is a very small part of what you will use in after life. "Knowledge will disappear sometime but wisdom will remain. Therefore, in choosing courses greater care should be given to the effect they will have on the quality of the mind rather than to the special training which they will afford...
When a business concern finds itself in financial difficulties which would disappear if its actual condition were consistent wish its books, its directors generally put their shoulders to the wheel and bring about a consistency. But when the Harvard University Register shows an actual deficit of a thousand dollars, none but its immediate managers seem to be concerned. The Student Council, which directs its publication, and the Harvard undergraduates, whom we might consider stockholders since they are the beneficients, take no apparent interest in the matter. If the Student Council members would realize their responsibility and if the undergraduates would...