Word: question
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Junior Entertainment Committee has succeeded in providing a definite purpose for tonight's smoker. The question of Senior dormitories is one that should be of vital interest to every member of the Junior class, since only through the enthusiastic continuance and growth of the custom can Senior year reach its full measure of success...
Busy men from outside the class have consented to be present and express their views on the question to be discussed. The class owes it to these men to make the smoker a success. It is essential, moreover, to a continuation of the spirit of unity that has held 1914 together for the past two and a half years that the class attend this important smoker to a man. CHAIRMAN 1914 ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE...
...governs our athletics." The Illustrated believe that they had reasonable grounds for assuming that scouting signals on the field (if such had been the fact) was as much a part of the spirit of modern football as scouting plays throughout the season. Is it not after all an open question whether the spirit that makes a practice of openly sending Harvard coaches to attend Dartmouth's games with other colleges in order to chart her plays and methods of attack (a thing which is regarded by the best athletic authorities in the country as legitimate) differs much from a spirit...
...therefore not our acquaintance with the spirit of modern athletics that is at question. The question is rather, would not a general acquaintance with this "scouting" spirit carry the average undergraduate logically to the erroneous conclusion that scouting signals is considered a legitimate part of a modern football campaign. If this is so, although regretting that any suspicion of a "charge" against Harvard's teams or coaches has been thought of, the Illustrated believes that some good may yet arise from a consideration of this subject of scouting in college athletics by the authorities of the larger colleges, a question...
There is genuine fire in the poem entitled "The Game," by F. B. T. '13. Instruments of precision would doubtless show, in the case of any reader, measurable results on his respiration, circulation, and muscular tension, thus taking the question of the merit of the poetry out of the field of opinion and into the field of fact. The magnitude of the results thus measured, however, would depend in part upon the sensitiveness of the reader, and in part upon his experience in the game...