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Word: goodness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...football season, and Mr. Fisher's description of the present condition of the Trophy Room, complete the November tribute to outdoor sports. Mr. A. K. Jones, who rang the College bell for fifty years, is the subject of a brief article with portraits. "Says Butler" is a good character sketch, well within the range of undergraduate observation and handling. Mr. Lippman's "Reply" to Professor Wendell's "Privileged Classes" shows keen and clever fencing without quite coming to a precise issue with his involuntary antagonist. A readable summary of Professor Coolidge's "The United States as a World Power...

Author: By Bliss Perry., | Title: Illustrated Reviewed by Bliss Perry | 11/19/1908 | See Source »

...Senior team plays the last game of its season today. On the strength of the showing made in the other games, it has a good chance of winning the upperclass football championship. Every member of the class who is interested in the team and the success of the class in athletics should be at the field...

Author: By G. M. Comstock., | Title: Senior Cheering on Field at 3.45 | 11/19/1908 | See Source »

...shortcomings of the monastic life. The rest of the verse is of the usual undergraduate variety; for the most part it consists in the rather ingenious phrasing of things which might nearly as well be left unsaid. The leading article, on "Student Guiding at Harvard," finally extracts a good point from a somewhat tedious mass of semi-jocose narrative. The article on "Stevenson at Cockermouth" is distinctly below the literary standard of the Monthly, as it is not clearly about anything, and uses words in a highly erratic fashion. Whether the writer or the editor is responsible for "flys...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: November Monthly Reviewed | 11/18/1908 | See Source »

...spoke briefly about the development and condition of the team. The season began with rather moderate material,--men from second and Freshman teams. The team progressed satisfactorily until the Annapolis game, when it received a decided bump. This did the morale of the team a great deal of good. The Yale game, however, will be a hard one, and nobody should feel overconfident from the result of the Dartmouth game. In the coaching this year, the team has been made to do more thinking than before; it has been made to work out its own problems, as a means...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MARCH TO FIELD AT 3.30 | 11/17/1908 | See Source »

...yesterday, and the men were kept on the field until darkness revented further work. Captain Burr was in football clothes, and ran several times around the field. He will probably not line up in signal practice for a couple of days, but will continue exercise to get back into good condition. There was no scrimmage, but the substitutes were lined up against the first team to work out defensive formations. All the regular men were on the field yesterday. Dunlap, who was slightly injured in Saturday's game, did not go into the signal work. Withington took his place...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LONG, HARD SIGNAL DRILL | 11/17/1908 | See Source »

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