Word: suggested
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Sheldon has been well trained in the technical understanding and resource that can be taught-that are taught, indeed, at Harvard-and he has profited by his training. Admirable and surprising in the first act is his willingness to suggest his characters as they come and go, and not particularize in minute exposition. He is willing even that they disclose themselves and imply their own backgrounds. Oftener, however, the higher technique that would have saved him from some of his confusions and changes of key, for example, and that each man must learn for himself in his chosen profession, evades...
...CRIMSON does not propose to enter here into the details of a system; it can only suggest what might be done. In the first place, the Student Council should have supervision of the whole competition, especially in regard to its duration and general character. It should have authority to exclude from the competition men who are not in sufficiently good academic standing. But most important of all, the final choice of the assistant manager should be made not by the manager who conducts the details of the competition, not by the members of the team which is to be managed...
...Council to supervise the arrangements made by the local political committee to insure that all necessary precautions have been taken to have the parade proceed in an orderly manner. On another page are published certain recommendations to the men who are to march in the line. The recommendations all suggest essentially one thing, that every man has the same responsibility as the various officials in preserving order and dignity to the end that the parade, in so far as he can make it, will do credit to the University. If these suggestions are carried out all will go well with...
...suggest, no sympathy is due the men. They heedlessly took their risk of punishment; 'yes, more, as the event has proved, though they could hardly have anticipated such a result, they recklessly imperilled the cause of which they were the chosen guardians. They deserve punishment and the harshest censure from the public opinion of the College. But why such punishment, one that bears hardest, not on the culprits, but on the crew, and especially on its devoted captain and the hard-working coach, and on the University as a whole? Why not show some sense of proportion, some justice...
...also demands meetings. With their important activities still to come, it is only fair to the members that they be given a chance to complete their organization and to instruct their officers in regard to plans for the coming campaign. In behalf of the members of these clubs we suggest that meetings be called sometime before the close of the present term...