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...intricate plays well learned as additions to the basic structure; none the less the team that can tackle, block, work together as a machine, and hold the ball will make trouble for the best of them. So with Harvard; the best thing the Cambridge system does is to implant fundamentals; it is what Rush is trying to do with Princeton and Jones with Yale. You will see today at the Stadium, beyond a doubt, a band of coaches who are not thinking much at the present time about November, and what this man or that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FUNDAMENTAL FOOTBALL BACK OF CRIMSON'S SUPERIORITY. | 9/22/1916 | See Source »

...make the best possible use of the opportunities offered to you. The greatest disappointment of all professors is because of the neglect so often shown by the students. The measure of a good teacher is the amount of interest in themselves which he can implant in his scholars...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RECEPTION TO NEW STUDENTS. | 10/1/1895 | See Source »

...education of public opinion. Another example is the toleration among gentlemen of foul play in athletics, making an umpire needful to punish it. Howling at "errors" is extremely ungenerous and unsportsman-like. and is never seen in English universities. The chief object of college education is to implant in tellectual ambition and a high purpose, and this can be done only by a common sympathy for noble ends. Freshmen bring their home standards with them, and there is a decided difference between the present standards and those of the time when Harvard was a local institution After...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: President Eliot's Address Last Evening. | 1/24/1888 | See Source »

...purpose to send forth into the world mere money-making machines. The New York business man needs, after the bustling life down town, the rest and refreshment of some literary pursuit; hence, our lecture courses on the different literatures are intended to foster a literary taste, and implant a desire to know something more about those new worlds that offer so fair a literary fruitage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STUDY OF MODERN LANGUAGES. | 6/6/1882 | See Source »

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