Word: widely
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...reviewer, however, is not satisfied to give his readers this single impression that Dean Clark writes out of a rather limited experience. Later in his article he implies that it is possible that the Dean is mistaken in his assertion that the college undergraduate does not differ widely in characteristics whether we meet him in California or Massachusetts; in Michigan or Mississippi. Now Dean Clark has had rather a wide experience with young men; he graduated from Illinois in 1890, and studied as a graduate student at the University of Chicago, in 1894, and at Harvard...
...whole the so-called facts seem hardly worth all the excitement they have created. Perhaps it is because a Vice-President is the man to expose what may turn out to be a menace some more articles are to come we must remember-that explains the wide comment; Vice-Presidents are thought to be so harmless. This is not Mr. Coolidge's way, however: he is a man of ability, and if the case can be proved against the stalking Reds, he will do it. We respect his determination to hasten to the rescue of our fair neighbors, his chivalrous...
...baseball team journeys to Lowell this afternoon to play its third game of the season against Lowell Textile School. The Scrubs, judging by their past performances, should make a good showing. Their worst fault is wild throwing, but against this on the credit side, they can put hard hitting, wide-awake work on the bases, and, perhaps most important of all, the knowledge of when and how to rally...
...wetness or dryness of the weather and other conditions then prevailing, the CRIMSON'S prolific pen-pushers and Lampy's jesting jokers will meet in their annual baseball gambol on Soldiers Field. In spite of the fact that the CRIMSON'S ball club is known far and wide as a world-beating aggregation, the Ibis and his followers have so falsified reports of their prowess that the betting odds are even. This will only be the second defeat which the CRIMSON will have handed to Lampy this year, since the cowardly comic was afraid to meet...
...ambition of a great number of college professor,-and rightly so; for a man who by years of training, is qualified to write or to compose music should be able to devote himself to create something of his own. But primarily he must teach. If the colleges have gained wide reputation as the sources of contributions to the arts, it is only because their professors have managed to find time to devote themselves to such things...