Word: older
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...disagreeable types and atmospheres. It has literary value. It recalls, however somewhat heavily, the psychological analysis of "Markheim." In romantic view, C. G. Paulding '18 perhaps best appeals to a normal college public with delicate reminiscence of a childhood love-dream. The author unfortunately at first sets an apparently older tone. There is entertainment also in Percival Reniers '16's article, "Speaking of Trifles," where his potpourri of forced daily themes resembles a theme corrector's nightmare. Of the prose pastels, "Charity" too obviously allies itself in subject and manner to Spoon River...
...subject of the address by H. B. MacDowell '78. Among the other speakers will be William Roscoe Thayer '81, Richard Henry Dana '74, Joseph M. Thorpe and Professor William Morse Cole '90. The purpose of the meeting is to bring the speakers of the Republican Club in contact with older men of the party, and all members of the club who intend making campaign speeches are especially invited...
...Dana '74, Joseph M. Thorpe and Professor William Morse Cole '90. Members of the Republican Club who intend to make campaign speeches in the interest of the coming election are especially invited, as the Hughes League believes that greater success can be obtained if such speakers are backed by older...
...While this may seem at first sight a complicated machinery, it is simple enough and should be eminently workable. It leaves the undergraduate captains with all of the authority over the teams and men that they have always had; their traditional interest in choosing the older men with whom to work out a system's problems are retained, except that their choices must be acceptable to the permanent body. Each athletic committee has full jurisdiction over all phases of its particular sport, internal and intercollegiate except that its acts must be authorized by the Board of Control. The whole loose...
...Hitherto, Yale athletics have been conducted and managed by the undergraduates, with such graduate assistance as from time to time was available or seemed desirable to the respective undergraduates in charge. The advice of the older men has been accepted or rejected as seemed best to the particular undergraduates involved. At times serious mistakes and misunderstandings have resulted, occasioning injury to Yale's name in the conduct of its athletic relations with other institutions. It has become increasingly evident that with the ever-changing nature of such control, as men pass from the college world to be succeeded by others...