Word: reasonably
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Never before in the history of intercollegiate track meets have the experts been at such a loss to pick the winners. The reason for this is plain when it is considered that any one of four colleges has an excellent chance, while two others may prove the "dark horses." These six colleges, are California, Harvard, Cornell, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Yale, with the championship likely to fall to one of the latter four...
...days ago the CRIMSON commented on the strange distinction which undergraduates draw between cheating in outside written work and cheating in examinations; and gave, as one reason for this, their failure to realize that they were tacitly pledged to do such written work honorably. Another equally strong reason is their failure to realize the entire similarity of the two kinds of cheating. Many men, who would consider it beneath their dignity and their honor to ask help from a neighbor in the classroom, are not above copying a report or a mathematics paper. Both these actions are equally forms...
...defeat was caused in a large measure by the necessity for depriving the team of the services of one of its strongest men because he had been breaking training is more than lamentable. That man, negligent because he had already won his letter, lost the University a championship by reason of the loss of playing power and general demoralization resulting. Fortunately the other defeats were free from any blights; the baseball one was to be expected, for a team playing under the strain of upholding a record of successive victories is always liable to a sudden slump; track was half...
...system has been in use but two weeks and is not yet clearly understood by many players, it obviously cannot work smoothly. This is a poor reason for urging its immediate abandonment. It should be given an extended trial and a fair chance to prove its worth...
...however, plans to exclude all such letters. If a man has not courage enough in his convictions to express his ideas as his own, and receive any criticism which they may call forth, we believe he had much better not write at all. Occasionally a man has a good reason for not wishing to sign a letter with his own name. In such cases, the letter is published over a pseudonym, and the author's identity is withheld...