Word: liking
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Student Council Date Book will be managed from now on by a committee of the Council, with J. W. D. Seymour '17 as chairman. The purpose of the Date Book is to prevent conflicts in the time of open meetings and the like. No organization shall hold a meeting open to the public, the University, or any one class, without having the time and day of such meeting ratified by the Student Council, through the chairman of the Date Book Committee...
...Hanover over the intercollegiate course on November 8. Suitable cups would be awarded to the winning team, and individual medals to point winners. If the proposition meets with favorable recognition from the several colleges invited to participate the Dartmouth Athletic Council expects to make it an annual event, like the intercollegiate varsity...
...should work longer than we play. In addition to these, there is a place for the other quality which is neither work nor play--but just nonsense. It stimulates the appreciation of gravity by way of contrast, and without fuel of this sort, enthusiasm for serious ideals might wane. Like all curatines, it should be taken with moderation, yet its advantageous qualities must not be denied. Our mental and spiritual health demands a licensed escape from responsibility logic and accuracy...
Cornell, however, like Harvard, enters what now is its most important game with a mixture of old and new players. There are three new men on the rush line and two in the backfield; and, moreover, Cornell's loss has been of men who were as important factors in the team's 1915 success as were Harvard's missing 1914 veterans in the matches against Princeton and Yale last year...
...these three premises Mr. Lazarus builds, like an edifice of straw or a house of sand, the conclusion that "Harvard University, judged by its majority, is exposing itself to the ridicule of America by taking a political stand based on puerile prejudice, mob imitation and unreasoning ignorance of economic history." These the premises! This the conclusion...