Word: fault
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...been relatively low. Perhaps moralists have exhausted themselves with criticism of the flapper; for the latest comment is friendly and hopeful in tone. In an editorial entitled "Real College Students", the New York Times suggests that the American college is not all that it should be, and that the fault lies with the undergraduate. It points out a "decline within the last generation in the dominant tone of the student body" and goes...
...reform, had well-deserved success. And Evata Nudsen made a really charming Gold-digger, perhaps over vociferous at times, perhaps too frequent and vehement in her assertions that she was a "good girl", for that is one of those things that should need no assertion--but that is the fault of the author, and this is an American play...
...against Dartmouth. The downfield work of the line and ends under kicks has not been all that could be desired. With Princeton's ability to run back punts Harvard's downfield work will have to improve if Harvard is to hold her own in that department. The chief Harvard fault so far this year has apparently been lack of offensive drive and punch. Several times in earlier games, as well as in the Dartmouth game, the Harvard team has been held near the opponent's goal line. This is a bad sign in spite of the fact that on each...
That it is not wholly the fault of the student is obvious since this is the one requirement for a degree which seems to present difficulties to the student. Moreover, it is quite safe to say that comparatively few men have found the trouble to be with the French requirement. The problem then resolves itself into this: there is some trouble with the German language or with the German Department and the theory that the language is at fault is quite untenable. The blame can then be laid at the door of the German Department, and, more definitely, some...
...knowledge which would seem to be sufficient foundation--but he must take three specified courses; selected from Shakespeare, Chaucer, Milton and Bacon, and Anglo-Saxon. If, at the end of his college career, he has not a complete knowledge of the earlier English writers, it is his own fault. He has built his structure of learning not upon a rock, but upon a whole rock-pile...