Word: particularly
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...group of large institutions is concerned, there can be no decision as to championship or first place. But the effect on the smaller institutions is very questionable. The desire of many of these, when they get on the schedule of a big team, is to strive to win that particular game because of a certain prestige which victory will assure them. Certainly the development of such a team is not normal. Moreover, the temptation has been too powerful to be overcome, and strong players have been enticed to small institutions by means which would not bear publication...
Yale has decided to accord a special honor to her athletics who fell during the war. Although no definite plans have been made as yet there will be established a particular memorial, entirely separate from the general war memorial which will be erected by the university...
First of all, the Japanese students and other foreign students can rarely arrange to come here with the same opportunities of securing rooms in college dormitories as American students have. The foreign student, therefore, rooms in Boston or no some side street in Cambridge, with no particular opportunity for continuous association with American students; and even boards in restaurants and private houses that provide very limited opportunities for English conversation. His religion often interferes with his attendance at Phillips Brooks House. Though the Cosmopolitan Club does all that it can for him, at the meetings of that organization he becomes...
Freedom of conscience is one of the principles for which Harvard has always stood. The University was one of the first in the country to divorce itself from association with any particular church. All races of all religions and beliefs are admitted on an equal footing. This fact makes the University what it is,-a small world within itself. These traditions of Harvard are too sacred to be violated...
...foreign universities and in a few colleges of our own country, notably Amherst. Shortly thereafter there appeared in the Illustrated a letter from a graduate expressing the hope that the early promise of the Jubilee might be fulfilled and that Harvard men would learn to sing well, and, in particular, wisely, since in his day no student sang with spontaneity and vigor save in the shower-baths, a practice wholly deplored by those who were given to meditation or to sleep...