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Team 16, "Chip Hounds."--H. A. Weis '17, L. H. Canan '17, F. B. Dean '17, M. S. Buell '17, A. R. Caley '17, D. D. Dewart '18, J. S. Kent, Jr., '17, F. H. Dewart '17, N. E. Burbidge '17, S. O. Simonds '17, W. E. Wellington '17, J. K. Hoyt, Jr., '17, M. Gersumky '17, E. W. Duggan '17 (manager), E. E. Silver '17, E. A. Teschner '17, J. Knowles '18, C. S. Reed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LEITER CUP GAMES COMMENCE | 5/1/1916 | See Source »

...oneself"; he disputes the pretension of the Imagists to have done away with egoism. Mr. Bullock is a little too hard on the Imagists, but not nearly so hard as they are on all their rivals. In general, the public is now folerant enough of their movement, and the chip-on-the-shoulder attitude of its poets is quite unnecessary. The Imagists have done all for their cause that propaganda can do; it now remains for them to write good poetry,--and to let others write in their...

Author: By W. C. Greene ., | Title: Current Advocate Uniformly Good | 4/14/1916 | See Source »

...treasurer of Yale University contributes part of a speech on the relations that should exist between Harvard and Yale, which is a Wilsonlike appeal for peaceful relations and for a disregard of the chip-on-the-shoulder attitude assumed by the less civilized collegians...

Author: By R. E. Connell ., | Title: CURRENT ILLUSTRATED REVIEWED | 3/16/1915 | See Source »

...editorial portion of the number, Mr. Sessions or anybody else interested in the cause might cite the notice of the Sibelius symphony as an example of what musical criticism should not be. The nervous, chip-on-the -shoulder, lustily contemptuous attitude will never convert the unbeliever, whose objections will not be brushed aside with a cool "One need not reply to the above mentioned criticisms...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Musical Review Criticized | 12/2/1913 | See Source »

...limiting it so as not to encroach on another. He then chooses his topic, and works to exhaust it. When his topic has become exhausted, the knowledge of experience becomes essential; he can tell from the scale of fish everything science tells us about the fish; from a chip he can recognize a Greek statue; from a bone he can draw the skeleton. In fine, his object is to make the part reflect the whole. To this tendency of the German towards specialization is due the rise of comparative history, comparative art, religion, philology, jurisprudence, etc. In philosophy also...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Harris' Lecture. | 2/21/1889 | See Source »

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