Word: slighted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...well-trained men whose abilities and devotion merit a much larger financial recognition than is now possible. In material equipment all are provided with scientific laboratories fairly well suited to their needs. The provision made in their libraries varies. As at the University the library funds are comparatively slight. The greatest need of these institutions at present is money for increased salaries and for books...
...which the University team has won over the Cornell runners the last two years. Coach Moakley has not as yet decided on the final selection of his men, but all indications point to a team that matches up well with the usual high standard. Captain Cadiz, who received a slight injury to his ankle, may not be in good condition for the coming race, but the remainder of the Cornell squad are developing splendidly. Hoffmire, Potter, Windnagle, Corwith, Silbert and Speiden are the men upon whom Cornell rests her hopes. Hoffmire is easily the fastest of the group, with Potter...
...fault of the board. Not only is material scarce at the beginning of the College year, but graduate editors--called in rather as distinguished contributors than as stopgaps--do not always excel undergraduates. In Norman Hapgood's article, "Germany's Disease," for instance, we have but a hurried and slight presentation of something that deserves fuller treatment and might receive better development at the hands of some undergraduate. It is well to dispute the larger avowals of Germany's "defensive" position which have gone forth backed by the authority of Harvard Faculty members, but it takes more through work than...
...clock. The Harvard team went to New Haven on the 10 o'clock train yesterday morning and had a fast work-out on Yale Field. All the men were in good condition with the exception of Clark who did not go down yesterday owing to a slight attack of tonsilitis. He expects to leave this morning and will probably be able to play...
...June 4, 1914.--Owing to the rough water, a strong wind and steady rain, today's practice was very light. The morning practice, which Coach Wray directed from his single, consisted of a few short-brushes between the Freshmen and the second crew, in which the latter showed a slight superiority. The boat of the Freshman four filled with water and sank just as the float was reached. In the afternoon the crews paddled down to the Navy Yard, which is the half-way mark in the course. This time the Freshmen had several sharp tussles with the University...