Word: submited
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...regard to the Harvard Yale foot-ball game on that date should be settled at once. If nothing is done in the matter, the blame cannot rest on Harvard's shoulders. The Harvard team are exceedingly anxious to meet Yale, and the manager of our eleven has agreed to submit the matter to arbitration, or to bring it up before the foot-ball convention and to abide by its decision. As it is now out of the question to play in New York, the college will go so far as to assent to the game being played in New Haven...
...evening, by a congregation who came to hear the Rev. Brooke Herford preach. He took as his subject the sacredness of law, and selected the text from the eighteenth verse of Psalm CXIX. He said that the sacredness of law was observable, primarily, in human affairs. All earthy conditions submit to law, else chaos and confusion ensue. Hence we should render a willing loyalty. Dr. Herford said that freedom was overdone in this country because there is so little reverence for law as law. Many yield to authority since they know the law will be enforced and for no other...
...such cases their recommendations too often fail to partake of the quality of disinterestedness to have great influence. It is hardly consistent with the dignity or authority of a college faculty to call in the assistance of under-graduates in the conduct of college affairs, or submit its decisions for under-graduates approval. We believe in a strong centralized faculty government. We believe in it much more soulfully now than when we were in college...
...Glee Club, or who have been diffident about presenting themselves. The club does not demand men with exceptional voices, but rather those who sing with attention to the requirements of the music and with care in regard to the pitch; men who are willing to work and to submit to the necessary discipline. Besides the large number of tenors and bases, the club will need a yodler and a whistler. The number of men who attended the trial of candidates last October was smaller than usual; it would be very unfortunate if with greater needs than usual the Club should...
...fully two-thirds obtain the aid they seek. In the second place, the writer states what is not true when he says very many of the scholarships are awarded to men who do not really need them. Before a man can receive pecuniary assistance from the college he must submit to an examination by the Dean and must sign papers in which he declares his need. Though a few men may enjoy scholarships who do not really need them, such cases are rare and do not warrant the complaint made in the article in question...