Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Coach Walker, on the other hand, will have his whole squad to draw upon. Captain Gordon, the most consistent scorer on the team, will be relied upon to do a large share of the University's scoring. In the first game with Dartmouth the Crimson leader was responsible for 16 of the University's 37 points. Rudof sky was the outstanding player on the defense in the game with brown on March 6 and he will probably start the game with Dartmouth...
...business of selecting the boy representatives on both sides. What American students in school and college should do is to develop the welcoming habit of mind. Then if our schools are permitted to make the generous venture, we students here at home will be ready to do our share in welcoming these youths who a decade or two hence may prove to be throughout their own lands un-official ambassadors of peace...
...evident on further thought, that such a proposal does not change the fundamental fault, intercollegiate victory is still the goal; the innovation would simply give a few more men a chance to share the laurels. That in itself is an advantage; but with keener competition for the teams, the over emphasis on sports would become even more pronounced. The solution when it finally comes, will need to go deeper than anything which affects merely the make-up of the "varsity" team. It must provide men with some incentive to play even without the slightest expectation of intercollegiate glory...
...figurative "Calendar for Today" discloses a versatile program. Hockey reaches its climax in the second game with Yale; the track team has its share in the Intercollegiates in New York; the minor sports are represented by the Gym Team's meet against Yale; and two other competitive activities make interesting contributions...
Talk has been current lately as to what share the alumni should have in the direction of a university. An article in the last Graduates Magazine traced "the growth of non-resident government" at Harvard, while a recent contributor to the New Republic denounced the tendency of graduates to exert too much unintelligent influence over an institution's affairs, which they are able to control on account of their financial responsibilities. Such charges are of course ill-considered: if any group of men is fitted, both by character and by first-hand knowledge, to serve a university...