Word: submitted
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Messrs. Crump and McGinley requested the committee from Yale and Harvard to submit in writing what they desired the city...
...have erred let me say, before I submit any "views," that there is no excuse for our defeats. Explanation there may be, but it is not to our credit. My object in quoting the record, "H. 18, Y. 12. was not to "exult," but to shame the men into a realization that we are not wont to take second place, and ought not to be forced to take it through crass stupidity...
...season next fall of such interest as has never before been seen. There is no doubt that there will be a Yale-Harvard game. The committee at Yale still has Harvard's proposals under consideration; Yale men are anxious to have a league with Harvard, and have proposed to submit to the "special students" clause if Harvard will agree to one annual game to be played at New York city. Harvard feels that athletics are for the students, and if there is only one game, and that at New York, undergraduates will never have a chance to see the great...
...Norman Hapgood contributes a lengthy criticism of "Browning as a Dramatist." Though the article is landatory, the author acknowledges that Browning lacked many qualities of a successful dramatist. He does not submit with good grace to the necessary machinery of the stage, and lacks also constructive power: his plots are strong in general conception, but weak in matters of detail. Mr. Hapgood then proceeds to examine Browning's dramas, beginning with the less important ones and passing thence to those which may really be called acting plays, Strafford, A Blot in the 'Scutcheon, and the Return of the Druses. This...
...seas. These people did not settle here but returned home as did many other explorers quite disheartened at the country. A permanent settlement, however, was made by Ingolfe in 874. The manner of the settlement was this: The people in the inlands south of Norway being unwilling to submit to Norwegian rule, migrated to Iceland in 884. This people increased until the population became from 25,000 to 30,000. They settled at first about the temples in little bands but finally agreed to unite and form a democracy. A constitution was adopted from Norway; the state was divided into...