Word: according
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...last meeting of the Glee Club the election of officers, which usually takes place at this time, was postponed to June in accord with a new policy of the Glee Club which was expressed in a change in the constitution. By this amendment the Senior members of the club, who are usually replaced by new men at trials held after the mid-year examinations, will be kept on until June. The Mandolin Club has also decided to follow the same policy for one year as an experiment. The Banjo Club has not taken action on the subject...
...rowed on his class crews in Sophomore, Junior and Senior years, and played on the University football team in Sophomore and Junior years. At present he is a consulting engineer in New York, and interested especially in the development of iron mines. His election as Chief Marshal is in accord with the custom of choosing for that office a member of the class which is celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation...
...perhaps, unfortunate that Professor Clemen's lectures here this half-year have been of a nature to appeal to a restricted class of men. Through no fault of the representative from Germany we have been unable to accord him the reception which his reputation and services would justify. His courses have, however, been of inestimable value to the men who have been able to profit by them; and we hope that he will not leave Cambridge with the impression that his efforts have met with poor appreciation. The professors who come to us from Germany offer subjects which, under...
...Monday's Herald, among other remarks on the football situation, appeared the following: "Alley, a 215-pound guard who reported with the Harvard squad early in the season, has either quit of his own accord or else has been given the quiet tip to make himself scarce. He played with an Oklahoma college team two years ago, and was rated as a find. The coaches refuse to discuss the case, and several undergraduates are of the opinion that Alley was not given a fair show...
...moments of the game, transformed a defeat into a clean-cut victory, should in themselves be sufficient to establish confidence in the minds of the most exacting critics. It is up to the Harvard men to rally to the support of Coach Crane for these remaining three weeks and accord him that necessary element in all campaigns--enthusiasm--the kind that always wins victories...