Word: seemly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...these days of new emphasis on the work of the College as opposed to the University, we need often to be reminded how curious some of our absorbing interests, and how juvenile some of our methods of discipline seem to scholars abroad. Professor Legouis hints, though most courteously, that in intellectual "Olympics" our "literary and scientific teams" might make a poor showing against competitors of the same age who were trained by the mature system of the Sorbonne. And Professor Eucken, though he refrains from open contrasts, emphasizes at the very outset of his article that "the character and importance...
...extension of the time for making entries does not seem to have had the desired effect, for up to last night only about half as many men as participated last year have signed up. The importance of scrub hockey and its necessity for the proper development of material for the University team have been repetedly pointed out. These considerations, to say nothing of the pleasure derived from playing in the series, should induce a large number of men to enter, and it is hoped that the final day will see at least as many signed up as last year...
...before. There was much less of the so called "yapping" by the players, and a little publicity should almost eliminate what remains of this annoying custom. The worst evil connected with the game, from a sportsman's standpoint, is its direction by coaches on the bench, which makes it seem a game between two individuals rather than one between two teams. Some agreement should be reached between colleges providing for the removal of everyone but the players from the benches, and for the complete direction of the game by undergraduate captains...
...this nature in the present issue that of Mr. C. V. Wright belongs to the best tradition. His review of Mr. Wheelock's recent volume is courageous and discriminating, and remarkably well written. It makes Mr. J. C. Macdonough's article on Emerson, itself a creditable piece of work, seem commonplace. But it hardly needs a foil to set off the astounding performance on Mr. Mackaye's "Uriel" which closes the number. One not infrequently finds in undergraduate publications evidence of a kind of verbal intoxication, the result of some youth's finding a fount of critical terms, and drinking...
...season. Technology was badly outplayed by the B. A. A. team last Wednesday evening and lost by the score of 7 to 1. In two scrimmages with the B. A. A. team last week, the University team was victorious, 2 to 1 and 5 to 2. These results seem to favor the University's chances in tomorrow's contest. Last year, however, Harvard was defeated by Technology 4 to 2 when a victory was predicted...