Word: utters
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Grilk 74, R. P. Utter...
Several attempts at fables cover the first few pages of this issue. Only two deserve notice. "The Wise Man," by R. P. Utter, is good, but one wishes its tone were otherwise. The dialogue is well done and the topic decidedly modern. The best of the other attempts is "The Mongol and the Chinaman," by Albert Dwight Sheffield. After reading all these essays, however, one sees a reason for the quotation which heads the collection: "For the term fable is not very easy to define rigorously." Two efforts at versifying, the first "To a Guinevere" having no excuse for being...
Last evening at a meeting of the Advocate the following officers were elected: President, R. P. Utter '98; secretary, G. H. Scull '98. John Albert Macy '99 was elected a regular editor...
Jeffrey and Matthew Arnold-Their Methods of Literary Criticism, R. P. Utter...
...Clarke, president of the Yale Union, in which he discusses the action of the conference on intercollegiate debating held at New Haven last spring. I shall not discuss the questions considered at the conference but I wish to correct several of his statements of fact. He says that "The utter prohibition of faculty help proposed by one of the Harvard delegates was considered impracticable." We did not ask for "The utter prohibition of faculty help." We only asked that such help be limited to the giving of information. We opposed only the revision of speeches by members of the faculty...