Word: obviously
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...managers of University teams, who have had practical experience both in competition and in office, have outlined for the CRIMSON their views on the proper method of selecting assistant managers. Both are agreed that in the details of the present system there are obvious faults, but neither considers election by the class as a possible alternative...
...ought to be said in behalf of the swimming team, and of swimming as a college interest. To be sure, little is heard of this branch of the minor sports, but that is mainly due to the lack of any University swimming pool, an institution which is needed, for obvious reasons, just as much as a new gymnasium. The swimming team has always been as much handicapped for want of a place in which to practice, as would be the University football team if it were confined throughout its season to the baseball cage. Yet swimming has actually done...
...fallacy to imagine that, by a total abolition of intercollegiate contests for a period of five months, the standards of scholarship will be raised. It is an obvious fact that men playing on teams have more incentive to keep off probation than others...
...enough in itself to fascinate all poets. If the success of any drama is its suitability for stage presentation, then "Sappho and Phaon." as has been proved in New York, fails, but so also must the dramas of Browning and Tennyson and Swinburne be called failures. The reasons are obvious: it is too long-I think that the version given by Miss Kalisch was liberally cut down; it is too far removed from actuality; it has too little action: it is too poetical. Even the exaggerated popularity of Sothern and Marlowe could hardly have supported this play and that...
...organized and plans for its future activities formulated. It has been felt for some years that such an organization was keenly needed, and, at various times, attempts have been made to crystallize this interest into a permanent form; up to the present, however, nothing has been done. It is obvious that, among the various University organizations which give theatricals, there should be one devoted to the presentation of modern plays by English or American authors. The annual productions of the Cercle Francais and the Deutscher Verein are well-supported and usually successful; and if this is the case, it seems...