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...Yale team which will face Harvard on the nineteenth will, in all probability, be composed of vastly different material from that which line up against Brown or even the team which will oppose Princeton next Saturday. This fact alone ought to suppress over-confidence. When we add that Yale has been known time and again to "come Back" even as late as the second half with the score 10 to 0 against her, there should not remain the least suspicion of overconfidence...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SPIRIT OF SUPPORT. | 11/10/1910 | See Source »

...White Bear of Norway," Mr. H.G. Leach gives a somewhat journalese account of Bjornson and his struggle to form a national language in Norway. One can only hope that Mr. Leach is not a good reporter; according to him Bjornson admits that the rural speech he is trying to suppress is more beautiful than that of the cities, which he is trying to force on all, but maintains that the future of Norway, "like the future of all other nations, is to be industrial, and the language of industry is the language of the cities, of culture, and progress...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Monthly by Prof. Harris | 4/15/1909 | See Source »

...colleges is a personal product, the work of those alumni whose names are forever linked with American history. The influence of many of these graduates cannot be estimated in terms of money; it is something above all such considerations. These are the reasons which bring about that we cannot suppress the influence of an American college...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DARTMOUTH ALUMNI DINNER | 1/23/1909 | See Source »

...present undergraduate members of the Society agree to cease entirely from all of their former activities; to make certain restitution of University property; to use their best efforts, collectively and individually, to suppress the Society forever; to sign, individually, the agreement containing these terms, which are to be made public. On the other hand, the present undergraduate members are not to be held responsible for any future conduct of past members in regard to the re-establishment of the Society; the knowledge gained by the College office of the membership of the Society is not to be used against...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 5/29/1905 | See Source »

...editorial on organized cheering, quoted from the Yale News in yesterday's CRIMSON, closes with a significant sentence. Cheering, it says, "has now reached a stage where, in the interest of clean sport, definite steps, should be taken to suppress it." If, as the editorial elsewhere states, the continuous uproar of the present day game" is regarded by both Harvard and Yale as "an unpleasant feature of the modern college game,"--and the recent communications printed in the CRIMSON would seem to bear out his statement so far as Harvard is concerned,--then these steps may well be taken...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Against Organized Cheering at the Yale Game. | 6/22/1904 | See Source »

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