Word: react
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Pennsylvania. Harvard's delegates are to be Professor I. N. Hollis, F. W. Moore '93, and E. G. Burgess '98. The conference, as has already been stated, will have no binding effect on the universities represented, but the opinions expressed and the general conclusions reached will, it is hoped, react in favor of uniformity of regulations governing college athletics in the East...
...held at the invitation of Brown University, and Pennsylvania, Columbia, Cornell, and probably Yale and Princeton will send delegates. The conference, as has already been stated, will have no binding effect on the universities represented, but the opinions expressed and the general conclusions reached will, it is hoped, react in favor of a uniformity of regulations governing college athletics in the East. It is understood that summer baseball will be one of the questions considered...
...representatives of the leading eastern universities will soon be held in Providence to consider the various phases of sport in their relation to colleges. The conference will have no binding effect upon the universities represented, but the opinions expressed and the general conclusions reached will, it is hoped, react in favor of a uniformity of regulations governing college athletics in the East. Summer baseball is understood to be one of the questions which will be considered...
...honest, manly and sincere. Then the problem is, like that of the girl with the water jar, to bring it home to your reader without spilling over. Now the study of literature is in great measure a study of style, and this if followed on true principles will react upon the character-will make us less tolerant of extravagance of mind, of loose statment, of inaccurate thought and of that faulty expression which is more often an indication of some or all of these than we are willing to allow...
...first objection which must arise in one's mind to a Board of Overseers constituted solely of New England men is that it renders the government of the University essentially provincial in its character. And this must sooner or later react upon the University itself, as indeed it has already upon the college. Provincialism can hardly be courted by those in authority at this time when we are rejoicing in the wonderful development of the University and when it is the most cherished plan of the President that Harvard shall become in every sense a national university, drawing its support...