Word: aimed
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Harvard St., a continuation of Boylston St., and are only about twelve minutes walk from Harvard square. This easy accessibility will allow men who have afternoon recitations to go over and get an hour or more shooting which was impossible while the club shot at Watertown. Another aim of the club now, is to bring out as much new material as possible, which is especially desired as the annual match with Yale is drawing near. Heretofore the club has been very successful, and this spring it desires to put into the field the best team which has ever represented Harvard...
...concrete and the way his mind works from the "Talks" which are being given at the Wells Memorial Building, 987 Washington St., Boston. These talks are attended largely by workingmen. There is a principal speaker, and some one especially appointed to answer him. A general discussion then follows. The aim of the chairman, Mr. Joseph Lee, is to have as many points of view represented as possible, and he extends an invitation to Harvard men who can thus have a chance to hear workingmen present a question in a forcible manner. The subject at present under discussion is the eight...
...John T. Morse is exercised over the annual graduation from Harvard of a "solid phalanx of free-traders," he should rather attack the spirit of the university which enables men to form their own decisions, than advocate the appointment of professors of Protection, whose aim would be to impose upon Harvard students certain doctrines opposed to the results of those students' reasoning...
...CRIMSON has made a constant advance during the last year. We are not blind to the fact that faults still exist, and that there are opportunities open to a college daily paper which have never yet been fully seized upon by any Harvard publication. It will be our aim to remedy any faults we may find, and to make the CRIMSON fill a more important position in college life, and become more of a necessity to both students and instructors than ever before...
...almost childish. It is quite evident that the Advocate has ceased to express a fair public opinion. We quote one of the most striking sentences: "We must confess our belief in the existence of a strong body in the faculty, headed by a personage of great influence, the aim of which is ultimately to confine Harvard athletics within the limits of Harvard college." The editorial then accuses this faction of working secretly against intercollegiate athletics and of making the athletic committee a cats-paw. This accusation is almost absurd. There are undoubtedly many members of the faculty and overseers...