Word: limes
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...athletic supremacy, so this scientific man declares, because the soil of the State has become exhausted, and college men have for that reason become a race of less vitality. If the tribe of weaklings at New Haven is to prosper, farmers must grow alfalfa to get phosphate of lime into the milk. Lime and legumes, says the expert, will go far toward redeeming Yale's athletic prowess. Thus is the intricacy of intercollegiate sport reduced to simple terms of molecules and fertilizers...
...longer than the old one, but is much more scientific. Should the advice of the scientist be taken, the Elis may make a revolutionary move in athletics by installing a staff of chemists to cooperate with the coaches of mere fundamentals and tactics. When Connecticut soil is restored with lime, and when vetches, soy beans, field peas, clover and alfalfa furnish the needed nitrogen to farms and pastures in that state, then the Bull-dog can growl in his deepest bass--"Harvard, Good-night...
...production of "Androcles and the Lion" will serve to bring into the lime-ligh: several of the popular actors of last year. These are R. D. Mallary '21, J. S. Coonley '23, and W. M. Patterson...
...Library, naturally in the lime light at this time, receives most instructive discussion at the hands of Professor Coolidge. One finishes a perusal of his article with a better understanding of the peculiar nature of a great scholar's library and some insight into the problems of administration with which the management has to struggle. While Professor Coolidge does not make much of the point, it is nevertheless evident that the Library has suffered from the war, and is in need of gifts to maintain it and enable growth. Mr. Lodge, in "The Meaning of a Great Library," gives...
Today the Union is in the University lime-light with its annual election of officers and with reports by its treasurer, and by the secretary of its library committee. It must be admitted that the Union does not bear the strong light of "pitiless, publicity" very well. Although the report is encouraging in some respects and shows that a deal of faithful and intelligent work has been done by the few men intimately interested in it, the Union has not been the success that it was hoped it would be, and that the University as a whole would like...