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Word: forth (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...revolution is necessary before national preparedness can become a reality. Adopting a socialist view, the writer, tears down and rakes over our whole economic, social, and political system, merely to leave it in that condition. The importance of universal education is stressed, and an elaborate, impossible scheme is set forth for a new system, but aside from this, no methods for improvement are suggested. The present measures of the government for preparedness are denounced as misdirected. Of what value are powerful armies and navies, it asks, when we have no minimum standard of living? It proceeds by demanding an elimination...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RADICALISM, GOOD AND BAD. | 4/29/1916 | See Source »

This letter is intended solely for members of the Freshman class. The class of 1919 has put forth two excellent debating teams which give fair promise to bring home a championship on May 5. One team goes to Princeton, the other remaining at home. The expenses this year will be large and are to be met by contributions alone, since the debate is to be free to the public. In previous years classes have each yielded up a total of $300. With the war pouring gold into the United States, the class of 1919 can do what others have done...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 4/25/1916 | See Source »

...managed by them. They want crew to come into the system under which the other major sports are successful; and which our competitors use. E. W. Mahan has clearly summarized the duties of a captain, and has given ample justification for his position. W. J. Bingham has set forth the undergraduate dissatisfaction with the present policy. Among the communications which the CRIMSON has received on the subject, it is significant that there has not been one by an undergraduate favoring the captain's supremacy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CREW SYSTEM BEFORE THE ATHLETIC COMMITTEE. | 4/10/1916 | See Source »

...question in which the Athletic Committee should not become involved is the irrelevant problem of professional and amateur athletics. Harvard is called upon to put forth teams and crews developed under given conditions, and Harvard, in fairness to her supporters, must leave no stone unturned in her effort to give her best. The question is simply this: Who is to have the right to select the oarsmen of the crew? Is that power to be vested in a young, inexperienced captain, or in a responsible, experienced coach, employed as a permanent authority? In fairness, alike to every captain...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CREW SYSTEM BEFORE THE ATHLETIC COMMITTEE. | 4/10/1916 | See Source »

Heeding not a few complaints that have come forth lately, the CRIMSON has undertaken to find who, if anyone, is to bear the responsibility for the glory or the ignominy of this season's University crew. The CRIMSON has hesitated to offer suggestions on the delicate adjustment between the coach and the captain of a major sport, in the hope that Mr. Herrick, like Mr. Haughton, would inaugurate a system wherein the coach takes supreme control...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COACH, THE CAPTAIN, AND THE CREW. | 4/5/1916 | See Source »

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