Word: views
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Dean Briggs is an idealist, and as such his attitude toward sport in general acts as a corrective of undergraduate impetuosity. As Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences he is remembered by many a graduate for his broad and sympathetic understanding of the student's point of view; as chairman of the Athletic Committee, his grasp of the sportsman's point of view is no less broad and no less sympathetic...
This is the open season for choosing courses. Naturally every individual approaches the matter from a different view-point. One man will take a course because he needs it for his distribution or concentration; another because his room-mate made B in it last year; another because it comes at a convenient time; and, of course, many who are seriously interested in the work of that particular course...
...view of the recent agitation at a number of eastern colleges to shorten the four-mile crew race the following extracts from the letters of different captains, managers, coaches and others connected with college rowing, which were gathered by the Yale News; and appeared in an article in that publication which dealt with the subject, are interesting and authoritative. Of the letters received, the number of those which were against the shortening of the race was slightly larger than that of those in favor of the proposed shortening of the distance...
...Cornell, both of which were opposed to the four-mile race. The Princeton opinion was given by the manager of the crew and was a reflection of the general sentiment throughout the university. In contrast the Cornell letter was by a member of the physical department who upheld the view that the four-mile race is too strenuous on young men who are in their early twenties. These above opinions are a sample of the many submitted and show that the question among other colleges is still an open one and no doubt in the near future the yet untried...
Public Point of View Different...