Word: enough
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...hockey team held practice every day that there was skating during the recess. Enough men came out to form two teams, and as a result there was a steady improvement in the playing. A picked team easily defeated Cambridge Latin School in a scrub game. The University squad will probably be picked on Monday...
...Defeat of Tammany," by William French Wilbour '96, is an interesting sketch of some features of political campaigning in New York during the past autumn. "'Soapy' Smith," by B. Wendell, Jr., and "The Hoboes' Congress," by L. M. Crosbie, are the two stories of the issue. Neither one has enough incident and movement to make it especially interesting. "A Plea for the Rush," by J. Willard Helburn, is, in effect, reply to Professor Shaler's article against the rush, which was printed by the Monthly in November...
Number five of the Lampoon succeeds in being fairly humorous except when it drops into poetry, as the Lampoon likes to do. Only two of the shortest verses are worth their space--one about "Ella," the other about "Solitary Sue." Both are ridiculous enough to be amusing. Several of the prose contributions show more originality than usual, notably the extract from Gulleivr's travels, which is a very clever parody. A large proportion of the shorter jokes are also above the average, such as the strangely familiar "Men at the Dunyer Cafe." Especial credit is due to the reportorial work...
...been the policy of the Athletic Committee so far as possible to accumulate enough money to replace the unsightly wooden seats on Soldiers Field, and to improve the property outside of the old dyke, removed when the driveway was made. Few students today realize what Longfellow Marsh and Soldiers Field were five years ago. By economy a certain amount of work has been done towards improving the property, and some money has been spent toward that end, but every year a small amount has been set aside to build new seats. The designs of these seats have been prepared...
...became normal and the students took a renewed interest in their studies and athletics. The war spirit, however, was not dead, as the students had turned the Gymnasium into an arsenal and spent much of their time in drilling. Of the men who fought in the war it is enough to say that they fought bravely and on whichever side they enlisted, they were faithful to their cause and did honor to their College...