Word: strictly
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...signed a written pledge, for on some such tacit understanding all our work in Cambridge is necessarily based. There is much annual insistence that outside work should be original, but that it is a matter of honor, quite as much as under a recognized honor system, and that strict adherence to the understanding is a necessary preliminary to even the consideration of an Honor system here, as at Princeton, are ideas which apparently few undergraduates grasp. A great step toward the elimination of cheating in outside work would be taken if undergraduates were brought to the realization that they...
...this for eighteen weeks" merely records the chief practical difference between foreign management and our own. Every one of the leading opera houses of Germany and France is subsidized by the Government; i.e., even in long-established centres of artistic cultivation opera is not a paying commodity according to strict economic laws of income and outgo. So far with us this assistance has been supplied by private generosity, but the question must be faced and answered sooner or later as to state support. It is really just as logical for the people to be taxed for the cultivation of their...
...loss of the Yale meet last spring. He urged candidates not to be backward in consulting the coaches about any trouble whatsoever which they feel to be interfering with their work. Coach Donovan brought out the point that yesterday really marked the beginning of the season and prescribed strict observance of the customary rules of training...
...snow-storm, light work was begun immediately. Except by the candidates for the University and Freshman one-mile relay teams which will be sent to the Penn Relay Games in Philadelphia on Aprial, 25, no heavy work will be undertaken this week. Punctual attendance at practice and strict observance of training rules will, however, be required of all candidates henceforth...
Distinctly the best work is done in the essays where undergraduate work usually is best. Mr. Whistlerr's plea for strict nonprofessionalism in amateur athletics stands out as the most noteworthy contribution to the magazine. The exposition is admirably clear and just, the illustrations are well chosen, and there is a maturity in the style which is most grateful to the reader. "The Joy of being a Freshman," by Mr. Murdock, is in humorous vein, and enjoys a real merit among pieces of its kind in making fun moderately and in having a vital subject. The writer has discovered...