Word: seemly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...improvement is to come. It is to be regretted that the committee could not have gone even farther, and confined athletics simply to undergraduates, but this obviously could not be done, for it would be impossible to impugns the motives of graduates returning to college. The present rules therefore seem the wisest and best that could have been made under the circumstances...
...were on sale for the Princeton game, as we are informed, some of the very best seats were sent into the city to be sold at the Athletic and the Somerset clubs. It is easy of course to see the motive which prompted the action, and yet it would seem an injustice to the students that such a thing should be done. College athletics are for them more than for the graduates and certainly more than for the fashionable club man. If, therefore, there are any privileges in an athletic line they certainly seem to us to belong first...
...understand the regulations of the faculty aright the briefs in English C and D are due two weeks before the forensics, that is on November sixth. Now, however, we are informed that they must be handed in today. The requirement would not seem so severe perhaps, if the forensic pamphlet had been in the hands of the students at the beginning of the college year; but under the circumstances it does seem a little hard that men should be forced to prepare briefs within a week from the time they receive the list of subjects, particularly as the conscientious preparation...
...definite choice has been made, the men now rowing are the ones having the best chance to be selected for the final eight. Not much can be stated positively until the crew candidates among the men now playing football commence to work; but from the present outlook it would seem as if there were material in the class for an excellent crew...
...rounds of the college of late condemning the recent regulations of the faculty forbidding dropped men from entering as contestants in home athletic games. It is very easy of course to account for the general college sentiment in the matter, and certainly at first thought the restriction does seem harsh. A little careful reflection, however, puts the subject in a new light. If the student will but fairly ask himself the question, "what after all is the purpose of college life?" he cannot fail to see the justice of the faculty's regulation. College life is free and easy...