Word: kuttner
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...analysis of President Taft's unpopularity by Mr. Wilhelm is very readable; and so is Mr. Kuttner's revelation of the dietetic secret of Karl Brill's football success. Most of what Mr. Brill is quoted as saying about over-eating is lamentably true, but it should be remembered that one of the Dean's hardest problems every year is to get certain thin-chested, self-supporting Freshmen to eat enough, a task which this article may make all the harder. There are also two pleasantly written descriptions of the new subway and of the new Bussey Institution, which will...
...Baron von Metzing, O. Wolcott '13 Baron von Breitenbach, F. Parker '13 Dr. Juttner, E. A. C. Layman 1G. Lutz, F. W. Schurig 1G. Graf von Asterberg, R. M. Ferry '12 Karl Bilz, A. W. Knauth '12 Kurt Engelbrecht, S. Minot '13 Von Wedell, O. Meister Rueder, J. Kuttner '13 Fran Rueder, Mrs. F. W. Stuart Kellermann, E. N. Perrin 3G. Kathie, Mrs. H. F. Barnes-Hochberg Scholermann, A. G. Langmann '12 Glanz, Q. S. Greene...
...Garcelon's "Progress in Athletics" tells something of the complex problems that he is trying vigorously to solve, and of his ideals in the athletic education for the weak as well as for the strong; Mr. Kuttner comes after him with an exposition of the plans for reclaiming Soldiers, Field and with a plea for sacrificing in their behalf the luxuries now bestowed on University teams. After Mr. Kuttner comes Mr. Schoonmaker with a suggestion inspired by Dartmouth for securing a new gymnasium. As a frontispiece to these discussions of athletics are pictures of athletes in action and at rest...
...Garcelon and Mr. Kuttner express, each in his own way, a great athletic truth. "We want our teams to be well cared for," says Mr. Garcelon, "but ought not to carry that care to the point of absurdity. It is possible to judge of the mental and physical condition of the members of a team by the complaints which they make." "As to there being any truth," says Mr. Kuttner, "in the statement that expensive equipment makes a team win, I would say that any team that thinks so couldn't win under any circumstances...