Word: unjustly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...injustice of the prescribed system is contrasted with the waste of time through ill advised selections under the elective system. "Prescribed studies may be ill judged or ill adapted, ill timed, or ill taught, but none the less inexorably they fall on just and unjust. The wastes of choice affect the shiftless and the dull, - men who cannot be harmed much by being wasted. The wastes of prescription ravage the energetic, the clear-sighted, the original, the very classes which stand in the greatest need of protection...
...games made twelve hits and eight runs to our twenty-five hits and twenty-one runs, while the latter club managed to get eight hits and seven runs to our thirty hits and twenty-eight runs. All this talk about subservient umpires is as foolish as it is unjust...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON.- I have noticed in late issues of the CRIMSON what seemed to me to be an unjust spirit in the criticisms on the freshman nine. While it is true that the nine has been a failure as far as Yale games are concerned, some credit should be given them for the faithful work they have done in training. There is not enough base-ball material in the class to form a good nine, but with what there was the captain has done all that was possible, and has been greatly helped by the readiness of the nine...
...appears to be extremely distasteful to many undergraduates, and complaints are again heard against the "wiles of the crafty faculty" which thus deprive the poor student of an hour in which he hopes by a stupendous exertion to review the work of months. We think that these complaints are unjust, and that the authors of the new rule have shown their real regard for the student's interest by thus depriving them of that time in which many men against their better judgment, unfit themselves by hard study for the three hours' work which is to follow. An examination...
...entire work is done at the Boston studio, where the facilities are excellent for developing the negatives. The work is done by Mr. Notman's regular operators and receives equal attention with the rest of his work. It would seem, therefore, that the charges made by your correspondent are unjust and unfounded on fact. He states that his information comes from "good authority." We challenge him to produce this good authority, for charges of this kind should not be made unless substantiated by something more than vague rumor...