Word: slighted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...hockey team will go to South-borough this afternoon to meet the St. Marks School seven. On the basis of the past records of the two squads, the Freshmen will have a slight advantage in this afternoon's encounter, for they have won two games and lost one, while their opponents have won two and lost the same number. St. Marks, however, piled up the large total of 18 goals against Cambridge Latin, and has since shown additional scoring power...
...Nicholas Rink in New York City in the first game of the Crimson-Tiger series. The fact that the University seven defeated Dartmouth 3 to 0 in comparatively easy fashion a week after the latter had taken a game from the Tigers, 6 to 3, makes the Crimson a slight favorite, although Princeton's practice, culminating in a brilliant 4 to 3 victory over Yale last Wednesday at New Haven shows that the New Jersey team has developed very fast. Princeton has played six games so far, winning from St. Paul's, Williams and once from Yale, and losing...
...expected, nearly all of the departments, affected by the recent increase of tuition, with the brilliant exception of the Business School, have suffered a slight loss in the number of new students. The increase of tuition was a measure of imperative necessity, and it is hardly probable that it has deprived Harvard of more than a very small number of students...
...Graduate School of Arts and Sciences which was established in 1872 but which did not come to be a solid part of the University until 1890 shows a slight decrease in the number of students enrolled. There is a total of 603 men in the school this year as compared with 652 last year. This makes a striking contrast with the other departments and with the University itself. They almost all seem to have grown. This loss is probably due to the increase in efficiency of so many graduate schools in the smaller universities throughout the country. One hundred...
...clipping says confidentally that Mr. Russel would probably not be asked to take a chair "held by such men as Professor Palmer and Professor Royce." The implication that Mr. Russell's ability and achievements as a philosopher are slight and not comparable to those of the men whom Harvard has, in the last few years, lost, is too wholly absurd to be taken seriously by anyone who has kept at all abreast of modern philosophic thought. Mr. Russell has established himself so firmly in philosophy that it is not untrue to say that in England today there is a "Russian...