Word: keeps
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Since training tables are needed to keep athletes in the best condition, since they facilitate the work of the coaches, and since, by bringing the men together, they stimulate team work, I believe that a training table costing not over $8.50 a week fully warrants the expense to which the University is put in supporting it. H. W. NICHOLS...
...however, the business of the Athletic Committee to drive students into the class room or to devise methods to keep them at work; and it is hardly a valid criticism of the regulation, that a student is not thereby prevented from spending his leisure in some other way which may equally hinder him from study, or from embracing the many opportunities for other serious occupations. It might similarly be maintained that the restrictions of "probation" are useless because they do not prevent a student from spending his time in various other unchecked diversions. That rule implies chiefly that the University...
...asked each day to see Tupper either to have a sitting or arrange for one. These men will be notified by postals, and their names published daily in the CRIMSON. Since a short period remains for photographing a large number of men, it will be necessary that men keep their dates assigned, in order to have their photographs in the Album. Seniors who have not been able to keep former appointments should have their sittings at once. 1907 PHOTOGRAPH COMMITTEE...
...them good. Moreover, it is to my mind simple nonsense, a mere confession of weakness, to desire to abolish a game because tendencies show themselves, or practices grow up, which prove that the game ought to be reformed. Take football for instance. The preparatory schools are able to keep football clean and to develop the right spirit in the players without the slightest necessity ever arising to so much as consider the question of abolishing it. There is no excuse whatever for colleges failing to show the same capacity, and there is no real need for considering the question...
...those educated men who in after life meet no one but themselves, and gather in parlors to discuss wrong conditions which they do not understand and to advocate remedies which have the prime defect of being unworkable. The judgment on practical affairs, political and social, of educated men who keep aloof from the conditions of practical life, is apt to be valueless to those other men who do really wage effective war against the forces of baseness and evil. From the political standpoint, education is a harm and not a benefit to the men whom it serves as an excuse...