Word: outlooks
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...real object of College sport--a general participation in healthful exercise for recreation and larger acquaintance. It is worth while considering whether the whole system of athletics should not be changed, either to one completely intra-college, or, as suggested by Mr. R. A. Derby '05, in the "Outlook" for October 5, 1907, to one of fewer outside games and more intra-college competition. Mr. Derby's scheme would leave the Yale game or some important contest, which would still mean with our "American temperament" considerable specialization and exclusion of other interests, and the undesirable newspaper and arena notoriety...
...Outlook--"Literature at Off-Tide," by T. W. Higginson '41; "O Little Town of Bethlehem," by P. Brooks '55; "Literature or Life," by E. E. Hale...
...grounds of an inferior coaching system, is assuming an unsportsmanlike attitude unworthy of any Harvard graduate, however little he may represent graduate opinion. A more inopportune attack could not have been made by the outside press. Undergraduates are ready to support their team in the face of an unfavorable outlook, and it hardly behooves a graduate paper to attempt to dampen their ardor by throwing cold water at the last moment. Ordinarily we should not call attention to such an article, but since this has come before the outside public, it devolves upon undergraduates to show by their attitude that...
...tramp--which he is described as doing--would bring the work home to us as the prospect of the tidy social ethics library does not. Mr. Curtis in "Analysis" tries to wheedle the ambitious into English 18. The remaining two articles are a reasonable view of the football outlook by Mr. Watts, and a story. The editors ought of course to be very much more careful of their diction: "long pants" and "America's greatest educator" occur in one column of the editorials...
...appreciative sketch of Mrs. Agassiz, the first president of Radcliffe, a review of Professor James's "Pragmatism," which ought to arouse curiosity and interest in every one who is troubled by ideas that refuse to be cleared up, and an article by Professor Richards on "The New Outlook in Chemistry," pointing out some of the great advances yet to be made in chemical research, are the remaining longer prose articles. Besides these we have ex-Governor Long's speech for the semi-centennial of the class of 1857, so charming that one can only regret that it is so short...