Word: lose
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...large and strong schools. It is almost impossible to formulate any one set of examinations which will satisfy the requirement of all these colleges and apply with equal justice to the various classes of men divided among them. I believe Harvard has little to gain and much to lose by compromising in the matter of entrance examinations. The colleges which have adopted the uniform examinations have reserved the right to hold their own examinations when they choose, and should the standard set by the association prove to be inconveniently high for any college the old and easier examinations will...
...question at stake is by no means a trivial one. The central states are growing far more rapidly than the eastern in population, in wealth and in culture. Is Harvard to continue year by year to lose her grip on this most vital section of the country, and to become a provincial college with provincial short-comings? Without casting slurs upon Massachusetts, I am free to say that it is the West that Harvard should look for new material in each new class; and yet the West, with a vastly larger population than in 1894, has diminished representation by nearly...
Suppose A to have kicked off and put ball in play and B secures the ball and makes say 50 yards. Why should B lose what he gained because A was off-side? If anything, his gain should be increased. Suppose A to be holding or infringing the rules in any way and B makes a touchdown. Why should B suffer...
...this year's football team Yale loses next year by graduation F. G. Brown, Jr., '01, left guard and captain; S. L. Coy '01, right end; W. M. Fincke '01S, quarter-back; H. P. Olcott '01, centre; J. H. Wear '01, quarterback; Charles Dupee '01, fullback; G. S. Stillman '01, right tackle, and possibly P. T. W. Hale, graduate, fullback. Hale may return for another year of graduate work in the university. The football eleven will thus lose seven and possibly eight of its strongest men, and of the substitutes the following graduate: T. S. Adams '01S, P. H. Kunzig...
Pruyn, left half, is a good hurdler and strong runner, but is weak on defensive play. He seems to lose heart or interest if things are going wrong, and does not assist the man with the ball enough. His interference is only fair. Blagden, left half, is a good man to follow interference and not bad in a broken field. His chief weaknesses are his defensive play, and slowness in interference...