Word: though
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...MacLaughlin '11 was the star of the meet, winning all six of his matches, though Z. C. Ross, the Yale captain, was a close second. As the score shows, Princeton was completely outclassed, Gardiner being the only man to win. The score of the individual men is as follows...
...much by the attitude of the undergraduate who cries out, "Lo! I will write a poem," and then sets about thinking up a subject. There is nothing of the perfunctory about Mr. Aiken's verses; the emotion comes first and demands expression in verse as its natural medium. Though marred here and there by defective or immature technique, as in spots where the author seems hampered by the requirements of metre, "To a Head in Marble" is true poetry in its unabashed revelation of the individual and in its highly imaginative form and expression. It makes February, 1911, a memorable...
...Though, of course, men who fall to take notes are chiefly to blame for their delinquency, still because the means to obviate this condition of affairs are so simple, it would seem, perhaps, that the Faculty had some share of the responsibility in the matter. At present there are but few courses which require lecture notes. If this simple requirement were made general it would involve no hardship for the serious student, and it would confer on many the very real benefits that accrue to those who take adequate lecture notes...
...game on Saturday was rough from start to finish, and until almost the middle of the second half with the score 2 to 0 against Harvard, it looked as though the hard body-checking of the heavier Yale, players would prove too much for the light University offence...
...Mariett's story of undergraduate life which bears that virtue for its title--a happy, humorous, altogether real story of a grind and the way he got over it--the simplest, truest story of college life in the reviewer's memory. The other stories are cruder in execution, though less sincere in purpose, be their background the gold fields of the Yukon as depicted by Mr. Hoffman; the civilized though somewhat vague habitations of an Irene, serially being educated by Mr. Moderwell; or the dusky hillside of a pair of married lovers left in a state of suspended emotions...