Word: enough
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first day of spring football practice, held yesterday afternoon in a cold, wet drizzle, was very unsatisfactory to those who are directing the brief two-weeks' work-out. They had hoped for a large enough squad of veterans and possibilities to warrant some early speculation on the probable strength of the 1916 eleven, but only 25 candidates reported. Among these were Captain H. H. Dadmun '17, C. A. Coolidge, Jr., '17 and T. C. Thacher '18. Field Coach L. H. Leary '05 was on hand to look over the material which he will have to handle, but Coach Haughton...
...pitiful response which was made to the call for spring football practice cannot be accounted for by the fact that some players are engaged in other sports. When less than enough men for three elevens report on the field, in comparison with more than a hundred who participated in the practice at Princeton, the situation is decidedly dubious. The prospects in football were made bright a short time ago when the services of Percy Haughton were assured as head coach. But a team cannot be made by coaching alone. Some amount of spirit is necessary on the part...
...present there are not enough candidates for the second team. All those who did not respond to the call for trials for the first team should report at Soldiers Field today at 3 o'clock. The plan this year is not to make a very close distinction between the first and second teams, but to have considerable playing between the two teams, so that a member of the second team will have an opportunity of winning a position on the first team in the course of the season...
...effect they have upon oneself"; he disputes the pretension of the Imagists to have done away with egoism. Mr. Bullock is a little too hard on the Imagists, but not nearly so hard as they are on all their rivals. In general, the public is now folerant enough of their movement, and the chip-on-the-shoulder attitude of its poets is quite unnecessary. The Imagists have done all for their cause that propaganda can do; it now remains for them to write good poetry,--and to let others write in their...
...protest against the "Safety First" temperament. Mr. McComb in his paper "Of Individuality" deals with an allied subject with greater brevity and force. Mr. Burrows replies to an editorial criticizing his expansionist views, but leaves the impression that if Mr. Mitchell cares to continue the argument there are obvious enough openings. Whatever one may think of the views expressed in these three articles, it must be said of them, as of the reviews, that they display eager and interested thinking on things that matter...