Word: seldomly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
What Harvard man is not proud of the free elective system under which we are left as free to choose our courses of study as we are free to choose our lines of work in future years? We like to be treated like men, and so we seldom stop to consider the flagrant abuses of this privilege that are perpetrated each year. In every class there are many men who are capable of electing their courses with forethought and an eye to a well-rounded education; but there are as many more who elect an irrelevant mass of studies, either...
...would mean that the innocent must suffer with the guilty; but it would be better to subject the thoughtful to a useless supervision than to permit the rest to drift through College as fancy dictates. Freshmen, whose ignorance is presupposed, are assigned to advisers, who are busy men and seldom give the kind of assistance that helps a man to make a judicious choice his Sophomore year. Frequently the adviser does no more than sign the card and leave the Freshman to his fate. During the second year there is absolutely no provision for the men who will...
Preceding the University game and between the halves the Freshman basketball team won its fourth consecutive game by defeating Malden High School by the score of 20 to 8. The Freshmen won by superior team-play and more accurate shooting. The Malden men attempted many long shots which were seldom successful. The Freshmen lined up as follows: Jamieson, l.f.; Miller , Case, r.f.; Wellmann, c.; Webber...
...Copeland will give a reading from Charles Reade's "Peg Woffington" in the Dinning Room of the Union Wednesday evening at 9 o'clock. The reading will be of special interest, as "Peg Woffington" is a book which is seldom read from, and as this is Mr. Copeland's first reading of the year. It will be open to all members of the University, whether or not members of the Union...
...representative who acts as an informal consul in matters affecting the students from his own country. The club is proving a boon to the foreigners at Michigan, who find in it an organization upon which they can rely for help. And to the "clubable" spirits among them, very seldom admitted to other clubs or fraternities, it offers a pleasant and helpful social centre. A similar club at Cornell has been very successful and occupies an excellent position in the social life of the college...