Word: naming
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Yale-Brown game comes a week before Brown's contest with the University, while Princeton meets Yale and the University in the usual order. Besides facing Yale, the Tigers also play a game with North Carolina on October 7. North Carolina is a new name on the University's schedule and this contest with Princeton a week before the Carolinians make their appearance in the Stadium, should give a good line on the play of the Southerners, as well as serve for a basis of comparison between the two major teams. Tufts follows its game here with a trip...
...America. The eminence of William James was more widely and impressively recognized in Europe than even in his own country, as was amply evidenced in the remarkable tributes paid to him on the occasion of his death by the most distinguished philosophical writers of the Old World. If the name of Royce is less conspicuous, this may perhaps be sufficiently accounted for by the more abstruse character of the subjects with which he dealt and of the theses which he upheld. A rare and high personality as well as an extraordinary intellect. Josiah Royce was one of the most potent...
...important result on the outcome of the game, and they can only be stopped by voluntary abstention. "The football player who intentionally violates the rules is guilty of unfair play and unsportsmanlike tactics and whether or not he expects to be penalized, he brings discredit to the good name of the game, which it is his duty to uphold...
This list of suggestions consists of guide-posts to clear playing. In all sport in general and in this one in particular ethics must play a large part in making or breaking its good name...
...article containing the most interest from an undergraduate point of view is "Reminiscences of '66," by Mr. George Batchelor '66. It gives an idea of the Harvard which President Eliot found when he came into office. His predecessor is almost unknown, even by name, to the average undergraduate, so that it is a pleasure to read of the days of President Hill. Mr. Batchelor speaks with some familiarity of Longfellow and Lowell, and also manages to give an account of the struggles out of which the present Harvard club system developed...