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...required to have one foot inside or on the base line and the other foot outside the base line and on the ground. This will prevent the possibility of standing entirely outside of the court when serving. A further amendment requires the umpire to transfer players from one end of the courts to the other at the end of every game in case one court for any reason is preferable. Formerly players were so changed after each odd game - first, third, fifth, etc. This rule can, we think, apply only to deuce sets, as otherwise there might be a manifest...
...second of Mr. Royce's lectures proved no less interesting than the first. The attendance was larger than we have seen in Sever 11 for some time. The lecturer held the close attention of his audience throughout, and the applause at the end showed how fully his lecture was appreciated...
...past experience has shown that however pleasant it may be for the recipient of the income, in the end he and his profession loses. Although it is a fact to be deplored, the scholarship is looked upon somewhat in the nature of alms, and no man can consent to receive alms without a sacrifice of personal independence. The remedy suggested for this is that the money be understood as a loan, to be repaid, if possible, after graduation. This might take away part of the sting, but some of the evil effects remain. The system, in fact, is nothing short...
...importance, and that his only worth lies in quiet, submissive union with all conscious beings, in so far as he has anything to do with them. But this is morality, and thus, if our mental growth is simply full enough, it does lead us in the end toward morality. Moral law is in harmony with the laws of mental growth in all cases of completed growth, and thus, however evil the world may be, there is always in a man's nature a tendency that leads one to rest nowhere but in the possession of true moral insight. This, then...
Many schools have been established with the end in view of fitting aspirants for the stage, but, under their training, it is only by talent and years of assiduous toil that a pupil is prepared to appear before a critical audience and win applause and fame. It has remained for our own university to solve all doubts, and found a school in which the dull and talented alike are fitted in a week, sometimes even less, for exalted positions on the stage. Of the peculiar fitness of Boston for a debut, on account of its well known "cultured" audiences, nothing...