Word: frequently
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Both boys and girls will attend. In the earlier grades they will be taught together; in the upper, they will probably be in separate classes or schools. The influence of parents upon the school will be felt, it is hoped, by frequent conferences of parents and patrons with the teaching staff, and the Division; and also through as active parents' association. This association will serve as a clearing-house for the discussion of everything pertaining to the welfare of the school. The Division expects to derive much help from it. But the teaching staff and the Division of Education will...
...January Mr. Sessions contributes a mature and remarkably important discussion of "Our Attitude Towards Contemporary Musical Tendencies". So impartial is Mr. Sessions that one does not quite know where to place him though there is the suspicion that he belongs to the "conservative radicals". One gathers this from the frequent emphasis upon constructive criticism for which might well he substituted "conservative radicalism" but in inverse order for it is the radical who by his receptivity to new impressions is today contributing most helpfully to the progress of the art; and the conservative who by his carping narrowness, is most seriously...
...following notice, regarding the tri-collegiate literary competition, has appeared in the "Yale News". "In view of the frequent notices which have appeared crediting the "Courant" with being a member in the tri-collegiate literary contest instituted last spring between Yale, Harvard, and Princeton, the editors of the "Courant" wish to say that the "Courant" has withdrawn from this contest. It was entered into by the 1913 board only. The present board of editors, upon taking office, and as announced last spring, decided that the "Courant," not being pre-eminently a literary magazine, had no place in such a contest...
There is a communication reprinted herein from the Alumni Bulletin concerning the cheering at the Yale game. It is signed Sporticus Antiquus and treats Yale sportsmanship in the stands rather severely. The Yale cheers did seem more frequent than necessary when Harvard was on the defensive, but as far as rattling from the stands is concerned, both in this last game and at baseball games, there can never be any certainty that it does not come largely from those near-collegians who cause so much trouble on other occasions; at least, such a severe indictment of such a very general...
...advantages. The exiled Freshman, in his far-off lonely habitation, may feel that he has at least sympathy, if he can watch from his window the weeping willows drooping over the water. The lone oarsman can compromise himself unnoticed and unlibelled by nature's young noblemen who frequent the river-front. But seriously, here is a chance for the landscape architect to plant something but formal gardens. The dormitories, the boat houses, the Stadium, and the new bridge are worth a setting...