Word: solids
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...asked for. With our splendid new equipment nothing further is needed, except the hearty support of every man who believes in out-door sport under ideal conditions. Singles, pair-oars, four-oars and eight-oars are at the disposal of the members, who will be formed into a more solid organization than ever before; and made personally responsible for the well-being of the club. We all know how solidly intracollegiate athletics are now being supported, and with such inducements there is no reason to expect that rowing will be any exception...
...fiction is not up to the standard of the more solid portion of the number. "The Tryst of the Princess Yvonne" is ambitious, but the ambition has not o'erleapt itself; indeed, it has fallen very short. The dramatic situations fall to stand up, and the ending of the tale leaves' the reader quite unmoved. The"Cupid in Yorkshire," by E. W. Huckel, is very much better, but might more properly have been entitled "The Precocious Child," for the powers of observation and reasoning displayed by the supposed narrator, are of a high order, and are properly recognized...
...seclusion, and the contrast of ideals is renewed. But, though the contrast is again in evidence, let there be no conflict. Let the Jewish ideal, that of goodness and character, combine with the beauty and culture, which the western races have inherited from the Greeks, to form a single, solid basis upon which to lay the foundations of future greatness...
...Alumni Association, Professor R. B. Dixon '97; and Mr. J. L. Coolidge '95 are making arrangements for the club, which will be formed in the University on the general lines laid down by Mr. Foote in his letter. It is planned to start on a small but solid basis, and then to allow natural development...
...careful examination of most schedules will bring out the fact that the great majority select their studies with some higher motive than that of securing a passing grade. But it is equally true that there is a legitimate use for the so-called "snap" courses. When properly intermingled with solid subjects they afford a relaxation, and at the same time have a certain intrinsic value. If a business man attends a course of weekly lectures upon some subject in which he feels a real interest, he will often gain the information he desires without outside work of any sort...