Word: amounted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...MacKaye '97, whose serious blank verse and delightful comedy have given him a place in the front rank of American playwrights. It has often been said that the literary work of Harvard men is usually critical rather than creative. We are forced to admit that there is a certain amount of truth in this statement, but we can point out several striking exceptions. Among the comparatively few really noteworthy American dramatists two Harvard men stand out with particular prominence, and another has begun a career of great promise. These men are William V. Moody '93, Percy W. MacKaye...
...subjects. The six best debaters in the University will be able to practise under one coach on their respective sides of the question, and a better team should be developed than by the former system. The second team, composed of three men who were expected to do a tremendous amount of work with practically no reward, will be done away with entirely...
...compete with any but amateur nines, and thus loses some very valuable experience, for in every game with a team like the New York Nationals a great deal is learned. Princeton usually plays over 30 games and meets several professional teams. It is impossible to estimate the great amount of good derived from actual games as compared with the less interesting and instructive practices, and the University realizes the size of the handicap which confronts Coach Pieper and the members of the team. We trust that they will be in no way dismayed by the prospect, and come through...
...very gratifying to not the unusual amount of interest taken this year in Harvard's campaign throughout the West and South. President Eliot left Cambridge yesterday on an extended trip to this section of the country, where he will visit many of the leading institutions of learning and speak before the various Harvard Clubs. This journey will take him further south than he went last year, and place him before many audiences who know little or nothing of the true spirit and ideals of the University. J. D. Greene '96, the secretary of the Corporation, is in Rochester today...
...reason for having this competition now and not in the fall is to secure another assistant to aid in the management of the intercollegiate games next spring, its merit lies in its departure from the custom of recent years, when the manager was chosen chiefly with reference to the amount of money collected. Possibly subscriptions are necessary for Freshman teams, but it has long been felt that they should be abolished as regards University athletics. With this move of the track management the crew will be the only one of the major teams left which derives its support in this...