Word: seemly
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...ordinary passer-by, it would seem as if the little Cambridge "muckers," had far more use and enjoyment out of the college yard than the students. A while ago the path from the library to Grays Hall was monopolized by "bobs" loaded with precious freight in the shape of "muckers" young and old, enjoying a pleasant coast. Now there is not a smooth strip of ice in the yard on which a mob of Cambridge youths do not slide during the entire...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: It may seem somewhat rash at the present time to suggest the formation of another club. None the less I should like to do so. The departments of French, German and the Ancient languages have a Conference, a Verein and a Classical Club. Why should there not be an English Literature Club for the benefit of men interested in English, whether taking courses in it or not? It seems to me that an organization embracing both instructors and undergraduates would do much towards removing grounds for the ocmplaint of deadness in the English department. The undergraduates should...
...John. He pointed out the simularity between our own state and that of the blind man who when he received his sight, looked around him and seeing men likened them unto walking trees, but still knew they were men. Though we may feel that things are not what they seem, we have in us a knowledge that tells their true nature...
...conventional methods, inherited from previous generations, and the new, fresh, original methods, that contribute their share to the advance of the age. Any thing, he said, rather than stagnation in educational matters. Certainly there is no stagnation at Harvard, and the many changes of the last fifteen years seem only to prepare the way for more...
...with pain and regret that the CRIMSON refers to another of the time-dishonored practices which have been handed down from generation to generation of Harvard students. But just at this time some such reference seems absolutely necessary perhaps for the benefit of freshmen if of no one else. There is a certain class of men in college who seem to think that simply because they may have passed an examination, they are justified in making life hideous for a day or two to the poor unfortunates who are their neighbors, and who are still grinding for their own examinations...