Word: ideals
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...Evolution of an Ideal" is a well conceived and respectably executed comment on the vulgarizing of men between twenty and forty. "Waiter Number 17," the only story of dazzlingly improper life in the whole number, is not powerful enough for the tragedy it contains...
Interclass sports unquestionably afford as much real fun as any form of athletics in College. The seasons are short, the training light, and the issues of no vast importance, so that they provide an almost ideal opportunity for exercise. For these reasons they should receive enthusiastic support. One of these sports--class rowing--begins today, and as in the past it has suffered materially from the irregularity of its votaries, we wish to bring to their attention the inconvenience which they cause to others. It is altogether natural for candidates who feel that they have no chance of making their...
...been allowed by President Lowell, these conditions may be consigned to the past. The rooms in Hollis and Stoughton are now to be allotted in pairs forming one double suite. By this means, two men will live in one room and sleep in another. These conditions would be more ideal if the sleeping rooms were divided in two by partitions, but the arrangement as it now stands is such an improvement, that we wish to congratulate the committee upon its work...
...buried in this Cathedral, it is indeed possible that this equestrian statue was erected in his memory. There is, however, no direct evidence of this, and the statue itself shows unmistakable affinity to some princely figures of Rheims Cathedral. It is, therefore, probably safest to consider it as an ideal impersonation of a mediaeval ruler. While the attempt made by some critics to identify this statue with the youthful Parzival is fantastical, it cannot be denied that in the far-away, dreamy, but spirited look of the rider there is something that suggests the Grail-seeker...
...cultivate the social as well as the scholarly interests of the members has been the aim of the international organization everywhere. At different places this ideal is sought in different ways; at Cornell, for instance, a residence building has been thought necessary. In this University more modest methods have sufficed. It is still too soon for the full effects of the cosmopolitan movement to be evident; it is not too much to say, however, that it will promote the interchange of students between countries and in some measure aid the cause of international harmony...