Word: wesleyan
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...President has been "Doctored" by Amherst, Tufts, Williams, Bates, Wesleyan University of Vermont...
Tonight will be Amherst, Williams and Wesleyan night at the Pops concerts. The program which M. Jacchia, will begin at 8.15 o'clock as follows: Entrance, of the Gladlators Fucik Overture to "The Beautiful Galatea" Suppe Fantasia, "Rigoletto" Verdi Suite "L'Arlesienne No. 2" Bizet a. Pastorale b. Minuet c. Farandole Canzone van Westerhout Overture to "The Flying Dutchman" Wagner Rhapsody, "Espana" Chabrier Song of India Rimsky-Korsakov (Solo English Horn: Louis Speyer) American Fantasy Herbert Marche Slave Tchaikovsky
Burns, speedy Sophomore center fielder, will also be out of today's fray. The injury he received in the Wesleyan game is rapidly healing, and Burns will be in uniform today, but until flyers limp disappears entirely, it is unlikely that Coach Mitchell will call upon him. Jones, captain of the 1928 diamond outfit, has been acting as lead-off man in Burns' place during the southern invasion. In the two games against the Navy and Catholic University, he poled out five hits for an average of .500, and he will patrol center field and head the Crimson attack this...
...same tone about the same problem. When the Harvard Crimson says too much emphasis is given to college football, scoffers might retort, "There is a reason." But there was last December a meeting of college editors and Chairmen of campus organizations of Harvard, Princeton, Bowdoin, Williams, Dartmouth, and Wesleyan which pointed out the evils of the situation and made shrewd suggestions for remedial rules. When announcement was made that Yale alone took $626,194 in football receipts in the single year 1923, undergraduate criticism was quite as free as professorial comment...
...imagine nothing other than exaggerations of college life similar to "Brown of Harvard" as responsble for such a remark as made the other day by a professor at Ohio Wesleyan University to the effect that the American college student of today resembles "an emotional flat tire due to over-stimulation cause by fast living." Unfortunately, as usual in these reflections, no supporting evidence is given so that any rebuttal is out of the question. All we can do is to take these cubistic portraits in the good-humor that Thomas K. Beecher said made all things tolerable. --Cornell Daily...