Word: strucke
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...first, one is struck by the utter absurdity, and nonsense of the book,- just as the swuare was with the story of the sphere,-but if one will have the perseverance to read it through to the end, he will at last see its purpose, at first dim. It is evidently an allegory written with the purpose of reminding us that we should not be incredulous of opinions other than our own, but should try to realize that there is some other view of looking at a matter besides the one which we are at present using. In explaining Flatland...
...examination in Philosophy 11 has been struck off the list...
...addition to these fights there were numerous instances where a single blow was struck, instances that occurred in every one of the games. A man was felled by a blow in the face in the Harvard-Princeton game, in the Harvard-Yale game, in the Yale-Princeton game. In the Westeyan-Pennsylvania game a man was thrown unfairly, out of bounds, by an opposing player. Then, as he was rising, but before he was on his feet, his antagonist turned, struck him in the face and knocked him down, and returned in triumph with the ball...
...John Harvard, recently unveiled, your correspondent strolled over to Jarvis Field, the seene of so many hard fought athletic contests, in which Princeton men have participated. Here he found the 'Varsity foot ball team hard at work with the Freshmen eleven. At first sight he was struck with the disparity in size between the men who compose this year's eleven and those of the former years. The playing of the team, as a whole, lacked unity. Every man seems to play for himself. This is especially noticeable among the forwards. The great fault with the playing of the rash...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON :-At the Harvard-Princeton game last Saturday' I was struck with the difference between the two contesting teams ; whereas the Princeton men did not seem to play in the rush-line with any more vigor and earnestness than our men, still they so surpassed our rushers, in system, that the greatest difference in effect was discernable. Each man on the Priceton team seemed not only to know where he himself should be at a given time, but also where every other man in the team was and should be. And this seems to me, to be directly...