Word: aimed
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...much go- as- you- please about the whole thing. Such work as this does no good in training men for 'varsity teams where their listlessness tells against them. In these two important respect. then the games have been unsuccessful. If class captains would bear in mind the broader aim of their work our whole system of interclass contests would be immensely more profitable...
...great value to the team and we believe he can be still more useful another year. Harvard now has an efficient corps of old football players, who are interested in her welfare and who will do everything in their power to help the eleven and it will be the aim of the management to use all the available talent and get all the aid possible from the graduates. The college at large cannot help but feel pleased at the turn affairs have taken, and we are sure Captain Waters and his coaches will receive the hearty support of every Harvard...
...demand that men who participate in athletics, as well as those who do not, shall obtain a certain grade of scholarship. It is a rule the justice of which is perfectly clear while athletics occupy an important part of our college life, they are not its ultimate aim. A man who hopes to make any team might as well realize first as last that one of his first precautions should be a clean record at the office. It his position there is precarious and he has really the university's interest at heart, as well...
...White of New York has just given to Yale a gift of a $500,000 dormitory. This will be another step toward the demolition of the old brick row, and toward the complete dormitory accommodation of at least the academic department, which has long been the aim of the Yale corporation. The plans, prepared by J. C. Cady & Co., New York, provide for a brick building 190 feet long, with stone trimmings. It will be four stories high, with an additional fifth in the centre. It will be fire proof throughout, and will have toilet and bath rooms on each...
...Frank R Stockton and the performers are all well known artists. The Theatre of Arts and Letters company is distinctly different from the ordinary theatrical company and it may be interesting to Harvard men who have not heard of, to state the purpose of its organization. The ultimate aim of the society is, briefly, to establish a standard theatre, in many respects similar to those in London and Paris. It is to be subsidized by a private club of five hundred active members. These will be chosen mostly from the select literary, theatrical and social circles of New York...