Word: ought
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Although the Stadium is snow-cov-covered, graduates continue to write to the "Alumni Bulletin" about football. We hear opinion after opinion about who gets the tickets and who ought to get them, why, and why not. All this is pretty much beside the point; it is only fair to give the H. A. A. its chance to act voluntarily. Some time ago it made the following announcement: "A new committee will shortly be appointed. The H. A. A. will give its ideas to the committee, and it hopes that before another Yale game many of this year's problems...
...having Dr. Fosdick to speak in behalf of the ministry. the nature of the demand is best exemplified in his person. We want more of this kind. If we had them the church could soon rise again to its place of moral and intellectual leadership in the community. There ought to be a good many young men in college who are fitted by nature for this kind of work...
...very little trouble. It is the dunce and the shirker who make it necessary for colleges to maintain an array of deans and other disciplinary officials. There is something to be said, therefore, for the doctrine that the better a student's rank in his studies the less he ought to be charged for his instruction. At any rate the Yale differential is a step in that direction. --Boston Herald...
Would it not be possible for such candidates to conduct campaigns; not necessarily anything loud or too vulgar for the delicate Harvard stomach, but by simple, direct appeals for the support of their classmaes. It seems to me that a man ought to be willing to talk in his own behalf if he is honestly convinced of his fitness for the office, and if he is not convinced he has no business to be running. W. C. SMITH JR. '25 December...
Another pressing need is for more dormitories. This year the University could not come anywhere near accommodating the whole class of 1925 in the Freshman Halls; we ought to have at least one more. And more dormitories for upper classmen too, to say nothing of men in the graduate departments. Now that the Harkness Quadrangle is completed, Yale is able to house all her undergraduates in college dormitories. We wish we could say as much for Harvard. Dormitory life is so essential a part of college life that we do not like to be forced to deny its advantages...