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...given complete and thorough examination; in all our better institutions the etiquette of the game is scrupulously observed. In short, each of Dean Randall's desires for the better training of students is realized on the athletic field in so far as it there can be. The disciplinarian's ideal of slavery either to a brute as a boss (many of our athletic coaches cultivate brutishness), or to an ideal that they must win, is present in athletics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 2/2/1915 | See Source »

...could more easily oust athletics from their present absurd position of primary importance. Admit the disciplinarian's point of view, and you admit that young men can only progress under very hard taskmasters or as slaves on the athletic field to a physical, in the classroom to a mental, ideal. This ideal our colleges must make clear and tempting to the minds of their students. And now we come to the weakness of disciplinarians--that it is not they at all but rather the idealists who are truly able to inculcate ideals, to tempt men, old or young, toward...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 2/2/1915 | See Source »

...simply one as to the morality of undergraduates, or whether it is or is not harmful to quaff the amberous lager. The question is this: are we willing that drinking shall be set up--as it surely will be by the outside world, if continued,--be a Harvard ideal. Are we willing to express such an influence? For temptation is largely a matter of emulation. Are we not drifting into Tuetonic "kultur," and into "basest hedonism"--as expounded by Harold E. Stearns of Boston American fame? LLOYD REILLY...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Opposite View. | 1/27/1915 | See Source »

...attitude of the great American universities upon any social question with ways go far toward determining in the nation. Harvard has always stood for the highest ideals of manhood in contemporary society could Whatever may have been true in the today this highest ideal includes the temperance. Any official sanction use of alcohol is no longer in with the spirit and social duty of the university...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: On Behalf of Graduate Schools. | 1/23/1915 | See Source »

...articles are: "Roads toward Peace," by President-emeritus Charles W. Eliot; "International Understanding," by Hugo Muensterberg; "The East and the West in the Twentieth Century," by Professor M. Anesaki; "The Task of the Interpreter," by Professor Josiah Royce; and "University Ideals in England, Germany, and the United States," by Professor Francis G. Peabody. George W. Nasmyth, of the Harvard International Polity Club, in his talk "Above all Humanity are the Nations," reverses the ideal of the Club, and then pleads that the Cosmopolitan watchword is the expression of the fundamental social truth, "Above all Nations is Humanity." Louis P. Lochner...

Author: By James C. Manry ., | Title: Special Harvard Issue Reviewed | 12/19/1914 | See Source »

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