Word: appeared
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...considerable numbers are the A.B., and the A.M., the former numbering 294 and the latter 148 out of 215. Table 15 in the Dean's report gives interesting statistics in regard to applicants for fellowships and scholarships. Of the applicants who failed to obtain aid nearly half did not appear at the University in the subsequent year...
Although the Register is published a month later this year than it was a year ago, it does not appear to have profited greatly by the delay. There are scarcely any new features, and the extension to the table of contents of the attempt to condense the book has resulted in a decided curtailment of usefulness. A number of organizations that would seem to deserve a place are omitted, and the lists of members of athletic teams are rendered of little use by the omission of initials. Carelessness in proof reading added to the other faults makes this edition...
Many complaints have been received which cannot be answered except by personal interview. Every one who is dissatisfied with his squad and every one who desires to try for any of the teams, whose name does not appear in the list, report at the cage between 1.45 and 4 o'clock today...
...from the class. Elections should be by Australian ballot or by a system equally impassive. They should not follow too closely a football game or any event which tends to bring too prominently to notice men who are in other ways not the best candidates. What may appear disadvantageous in the slight complexity of these rules would be offset by the sanction which a recognized method of procedure would give to the removal of officers who seemed inefficient...
...policy of playing graduate students on university teams has been long established at Harvard. In boating the ante-bellum records show that even members of the body of instruction were included in the athletic family. On the roll of the University crew of 1858, for instance, appear the names of Charles W. Eliot and Alexander Agassiz, both at that date graduates and the former on the teaching staff of the University. This practice seems to have lapsed later, but in the spring of 1871, at a conference between representatives of Harvard and Yale (at which the writer was present), notice...