Word: shows
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...single Harvard correspondent who is not loyal to his university-and more loyal than those carping critics who tear out imaginary gray hairs over the result, instead of seeking to apply a remedy at the ultimate cause the foolish and lawless spirit which some undergraduates are always bound to show on the occasion of an athletic victory. One might as well blame a man or a newspaper for reporting the account of the Bram murder trial; since this was such a terrible murder and such a disgrace to civilization, why not suppress everything about it? Why not suppress some...
...thought that the reports of the baseball celebration were the work of the Harvard correspondents. This was not the case. The editors understood perfectly at the time that none of the reports were written by students. As they then took care to expain, it was intended to show those papers which had been most conspicuous in the past for the publication of similar articles that the CRIMSON considers them as exponents of what is low and unreliable in journalism and is unwilling to extend the privileges of its office to their correspondents. Thus-it will be seen that the writer...
About thirty-five candidates, exclusive of the battery men, are still practicing in the cage. The material as a whole are light, but the men are taking hold well and show great improvement over their early form. The sliding has progressed more rapidly than in former years owing to Captain Dean's personal attention before the 'Varsity candidates were called out. There is still plenty of room for improvement in almost all the men, especially in throwing and quick starting...
...House Commission Mr. Gilder has done a great deal during the past few months to procure the passage of a bill in the New York Legislature providing for improved tenement houses and open air parks in the crowded districts of New York City. In his address he proposes to show the influence of public opinion and good citizenship in bringing about these results. Mr. Gilder is well known as the editor of the Century Magazine and has taken an active part lately in the University Settlement work in New York...
...question then arises, is this the necessary law of human progress? Many things go to show that it is not. Not only better results, but better methods may be gradually evolved by the law of evolution itself. The whole question is one of price. The development of the race is to go on. The question is what price shall...