Word: standing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...CRIMSON yesterday morning printed an article on the present situation in the matter of extra seats at the Yale game. In stating the two aspects of the case, the wording used unfortunately was such that room has been made for a misinterpretation of the stand taken by the H. A. A. Following is a communication from Graduate Treasurer F. W. Moore '93, which in stating officially the points involved in the controversy will undoubtedly clear up all doubt which may have arisen on the subject...
...larger colleges and universities have fairly well established reputations. Mention of Yale, Cornell, and Dartmouth brings up defined notions of what these institutions stand for and the quality of their human product. Harvard for a number of years, has been thought of definitely as a university not exactly bloodless, but at least less boisterous than some of its neighbors. It has been regarded as cloistral, its vigor somewhat stifled by--er--snobbishness...
...Court. And finally he considered Lincoln's high-minded plan of 1864: of paying to the slave states four million dollars for the giving up of their slaves, and the formation of peace. But there was no one else in the government fine enough to take the President's stand, and his plan could not be carried...
...CRIMSON'S editorials about Mr. Maxim's gifts, its campaign against military camps, and other matters, the criticism has been made, verbally and through out-spoken "letters to the editor," that the CRIMSON is misrepresenting the opinions of the University to the general public. The CRIMSON'S stand against military camps, for example, has been branded as a wilful attempt to disseminate a false impression...
During the agitation which has been going on recently in favor of a better army and navy and for the purpose of widening the scope and field of usefulness of the summer military camps, it has been amusing to note the stand which the CRIMSON has taken. The CRIMSON is no doubt a great factor in shaping the ideas and raising the ideals of the unthinking undergraduate, but it is a question as to whether every undergraduate holds this same view. We feel that each individual has ideas of his own upon the subject, and that, on the whole, they...