Word: slighted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...lightest man in the visiting line, will have his greater experience to offset Taylor's weight; in Anderson and Miller, Dadmun and Cowen will meet two veteran guards who each tip the scales to over 200 pounds, while the new Ithacan tackles may be at a slight disadvantage in opposing veterans Gilman and Parson. Shelton, a skillful end of two years' standing, and Eckley, a former substitute, are the Cornell men who will probably play against Harte and Soucy, and in that department the battle should be about even...
...crippled condition and the formidable record made thus far by the southerners, Harvard will be very fortunate to pull out a victory. Virginia sends up a team which man for man will probably excel the University in a number of positions. Except for Stillwell, an end, who is slight and tall the men present a very symmetrical line-up; each man experienced, big, alert, fast and strong. This eleven last year won the championship of the sough and two weeks ago today, by using a carefully planned defense and by taking every advantage of its opponents' tactical mistakes, defeated Yale...
...preliminary registration figures at Yale show the present enrolment to be 3303, a slight increase over similar figures last year. The freshman class in the college is exactly the same as last year, namely, 472, while that in the Sheffield Scientific School is 437, a gain...
...leads with an approximate increase of 30 per cent. The Divinity School figures speak for the vitality of the theological department of the University, while the Law School, Dental School, and Medical School all show an increase of more than 10 per cent. The registration of Freshmen shows a slight decrease, due probably to the fact that last year was the initial year of the Freshman Dormitories. The figures show the enrolment of the University for 1914 and 1915 made on corresponding days of the new year. HARVARD COLLEGE. 1914 1915 Seniors, 425 403 Juniors, 581 557 Sophomores...
...preventing violence. By the time such remedies can be applied, the harm is done; in the case of nations the war has begun, and the world is ablaze. The fear of an international boycott may be great, but for a country that has prepared elaborately for war it is slight compared with the prospect of an armed conflict with all the other great powers of the world. What is needed is the certainty of collision with an overwhelming force. Such a force, if it could really be created by a league to enforce peace, would probably never be used...