Word: enough
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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With a scoreless tie resulting in the Camp Devens-Naval Reserve football game at Braves Field yesterday morning, the inter-service championship of the Northeast is still undetermined. Coach Haughton had not had enough time to develop sufficient team work with the Devens squad to defeat the Newport sailors, whom a long season had moulded into a well-playing team from a group of star individuals...
...intramural games, inter-battalion or inter-class. It had been thought that such a plan would give the best opportunity for exercise to the largest number of students, but the meeting last evening decided that either inter-battalion or inter-class games would be impracticable. There is not enough esprit de corps to warrant battalion athletics, and the classes of 1919 and 1920 are the only ones who could make up sevens. Accordingly, the meeting recommended that hockey for the students who are not experts should be played in the Leiter Cup series, as in former years. These series have...
...decrease in representation is shown throughout the country. Two states Mississippi and Wyoming, have no representatives this year. One state, Arlzona, has increased, while Oregon remains constant. Of the states having a large enough number of students here to be representative, California has suffered the greatest decline, having lost 64 per cent, of its number. Missouri follows with a decrease of 58 per cent., and next comes Illinois, with 54 per cent. Massachusetts is reduced by a fourth of its usual number...
This feeling of recoil, even of hatred, is human enough to be easily comprehensible, but does its stimulation into a frenzy hasten or retard our war-making and is it, therefore, to be encouraged or discouraged? We fail to see how an American, by refusing to hear an orchestra play the music of Mozart or Beethoven, either spites or weakens the Kaiser or adds a bit to our fighting strength. Why not keep our energies within effective channels. --Boston Advertiser...
...been said during the last month concerning the losses which our universities are suffering by reason of diminished attendance due to the war. But the experience of Oxford and Cambridge, the great institutions of higher learning in England, should be pertinent as demonstrating that if the war lasts long enough its effect on our colleges will not merely be shown in figures of decreased enrolment, or financial deficits, or courses of study omitted. Three years of war have virtually taken away from these English universities all their physically-fit students. In their place are coming the young men who have...