Word: errors
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...placed in a more conspicuous position than that or our newly-elected hockey captain. We may welcome pictures, even to the extent of two and a half pages, showing how other colleges are preparing for the war, but Yale water polo is a little out of place. Another unfortunate error, marring an otherwise excellent number, is the failure to give Dr. Sargent his proper title. It would be serious enough to refer to him merely as Mr. Sargent in any case, but to do so on the cover is inexcusable...
...place where men have learned to differentiate between man and man and the most primitive tribes have learned that sort of selection--are all beings equally regarded and equally admired by their fellows. In any social scheme where relations become more complex there is liable to be error of judgment. Men place stress on external appearances, they judge others by their possessions, or some fancied distinctiveness of birth. At Harvard, as at other places frequented by civilized man, those external appearances are apt to mislead the calmest judgment, and give false value to the characters of some men who seem...
...long double. Cummings, who was playing in right field for Team B for the first time, singled, Holly scoring the third run for the substitutes. Team B scored again in the seventh when Harrison hit out a long sacrifice fly to Percy, Henderson, who had reached third on an error and a passed ball by Stephens, tallying on the throw-in. The regulars scored their only run in the seventh, when Bond was passed by Garritt, stole second, and reached home. Percy was thrown out at first...
...Skeffington meeting was to have been open only to members of the University (although some newspapers, through their own error, announced it as open to the public). Even so, the hall was refused on the ground that this was "propaganda." Keeping out "propaganda" was attempted in 1911 by the exclusion of Mrs. Pankhurst. Whatever the merits or demerits of Mrs. Pankhurst's opinions might be, this policy was seen to be objectionable, and was apparently abandoned--witness the suffrage speaker's noted move. I am not aware that it has been revived till the Skeffington case...
Owing to an error in the report made to the CRIMSON yesterday on the result of the competition between the Law School Clubs, the Witanagemot Club of the Law School was given the credit of defeating the Lowell club for the Ames Prize, when the actual result was to the contrary. The Lowell club, whose argument was upheld by A. C. Reis 3L and C. E. Snow 3L, was awarded the decision by the judges of the competition. The case argued was "The Danbury Hatter's Case as affected by the Clayton Act," and the attorneys for the Witanagemot club...