Word: standpoint
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Indian game, and an average of almost twenty-three cuts on the day of the Dartmouth game. In one course, and not the largest course in College by any means, no less than eighty men cut before the Dartmouth game. This is no record to boast of from the standpoint of undergraduate zeal in things intellectual and it is to be hoped that a better record will be made this year. The Council is right in its statements and should be supported...
...second article Professor George F. Moore discusses from the Harvard standpoint the alliance which will go into effect next year between the and over theological Seminary and Harvard University. An excellent cut of the buildings which the Seminary now occupies in Andover is used to illustrate the article. Arthur P. Stone '93, who coached the Harvard debating team that won from Yale this year, has written a short tribute to the Harvard system of teaching public speaking and debating...
...yard dash was a disappointment from the Harvard standpoint. Sherman of Dartmouth won in 10 1-5 seconds, nearly a yard ahead of Lockwood, who barely beat out Hawley of Dartmouth. Captain Dodge failed to place. In the 220-yard dash it was thought best not to start Captain Dodge, as the muddy track made the risk of mishap too great. This event was also won by Sherman in the slow time of 22 3-5 seconds. Hawley was second and T. S. Blumer '10 was third...
...only been against the opposition of the College authorities that the Senior class for the past few years has been able to take for itself three buildings at the north end of the Yard, and the future of the Senior dormitory scheme is by no means assured. From the standpoint of the Seniors, it has invariably proven satisfactory in spite of the handicap assumed at the start in the peculiar assignment of the rooms; but on the other hand, there is the excellent contention that a mixture of men of all classes, of law and graduate students even...
...Western men, but a disadvantage entirely due to a misunderstanding. The advantages are many. Besides the well-recognized advantages which are open to everyone, the Westerner has the advantage of being in a new and different situation, so he very naturally looks at things from quite a different standpoint than does the Eastern man; and is perhaps more able to take things for what they are worth. Whereas if he were in a Western college or in an Eastern college composed largely of Western men, he would be in a more congenial atmosphere from the beginning, and his view-point...