Word: looks
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...contribution on "College Men and Service." It is now ten years since his meteoric career as a University athlete was terminated. The life of a collegiate athletic reputation is short at the best, and Cutts's came to an untimely end. Yet those who knew him then could calmly look forward to a new and more substantial reputation in bigger fields, and they have not been disappointed. Undergraduates of today ought to read the contribution by Cutts...
...revised list of the Class is now posted in Leavitt & Peirce's. This will be used for mailing purposes and for the Sanders Theatre Program. After April 27, it will be considered as final. Seniors are asked to look over this list and send any corrections or omissions to the secretary, R. B. Wigglesworth, as soon as possible. 1912 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE...
...three major sports: football, crew, and baseball; and indirectly, through the Intercollegiates, in track. The addition of Princeton last fall to the football, and now to the crew schedule means a more complete bond between two universities which should be on the closest possible terms. Although we do not look to see a Princeton game, meet, or race ever partake of the interest now attached to a Yale contest, we think that the best interests of intercollegiate sportsmanship are served when Harvard appears on the Princeton schedule. A dual meet in track alone remains to put the two universities...
...candidate for admission to the bar is submitted in many states. Of this system President Lowell says in his report: "If a student obtains his degree by passing examinations in separate courses, each course will be to a great extent an end in itself; whereas, if he must look forward to a general examination in the future, the course becomes a means to an end, a part of a large whole." This system, though successful in England and Germany, has yet to be tried here; but we have every reason to expect that it will be a great improvement over...
...that presents the full significance of the phrase which describes its purpose--"to further and expand the cultural relations between the United States an Germany." Such an organized move has been necessary, because, in spite of the fact that thousands of Americans visit Germany every summer, most of them look upon the excursion as a "gaudy vacation" and do not work hard "as unofficial delegates of their country for the cultivation of international friendship." He describes the mass of American tourists in Europe as passing through the country with "an open purse but a closed mind. This careless, haughty, condescending...