Word: lowe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...experience with life in the University includes war and even pre-war times are interested observers of the rapid transformation which is bringing us back to the normal order of what the outside world loves to term "college life." The signing of the armistice last November marked a very low point in the tide of college activities beyond the regular courses. At that time practically every activity which in some degree did not spring from military courses was either non-existent or well along the road to become so. The ink was searcely dry on the armistice papers, however...
From the beginning the Freshmen forced the pace. After four minutes Baker carried the puck the length of the ice, passing to Martin who scored on a low shot. Here, O'Hearn, captain of the Brookline team took the puck down the ice in a series of brilliant rushes but was unable to tally. The half ended with the puck in the Brookline territory. In the last two minutes of play Humphrey made the second tally in a scrimmage before the Brookline...
...first score was made in the fourth minute of play by F. McN. Bacon '21 on a long low shot from mid-rink which passed the Blue outer defence and slipped between Poindexter's skates for a goal. Three minutes later T. M. Avery '21 added a second tally for the University when the puck, on a pretty shot from Bacon, carromed off his stick into the net. At this juncture, Ingalls, the Yale captain, was penalized two minutes for tripping. He had returned to the game, however, when H. K. White, Jr., '19, after rushing the puck...
...Garcelon, LL.B. '95 who, when in College won his "H" in the 220-yard low hurdles against Yale and was Graduate Treasurer of the H. A. A. for six years from 1907 to 1913, was interviewed by a CRIMSON reporter yesterday on the development of intramural athletics. While Graduate Treasurer, in 1909 Mr. Garcelon started the present Freshman athletic class. He advocates that this work, now, entirely voluntary be amplified and made compulsory. "The solution of the problem of intramural athletics," said Mr. Garcelon, "the way to turn the attention of the 'bleacher student' from the college teams and center...
...hold", and it aims to dull the conscience into accepting the kind of listless existence it signifies. The man who says he is "getting by" is merely drifting with the current into the sea of oblivion. When the fighting spirit of races as well as of individuals runs low rapid degeneration inevitably follows. And when high resolve and constant initiative relax their powers, then the loser is morally poor indeed; for he has dropped out of the race in life and but impedes the way for those behind. If a student is merely "getting by" he is a liability...