Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...importance of this work cannot be too strongly emphasized. It will develop speed and endurance which at this time of the year can be acquired in no other way. Many men who are not taking any other form of exercise would do well to come out and take part in these runs. Even if they do not make the team this fall their chances for the spring will be greatly improved. No man need feel that the work will be too hard, as a fast and slow squad will be formed when the runs become longer. At first they will...
...will also be necessary to develop a good punter, and considerable attention has been devoted to this branch of the game. Foster, Leonard and Hall have been doing very good work, and Brill has shown considerable improvement, although he is still far from being a first class punter. Hanley cannot always be relied upon and Lockwood is very erratic...
There are 1232 seats in Sanders Theatre. Six hundred of these are reserved for the candidates for degrees to occupy. This leaves only 630 for distribution and therefore the candidates for degrees cannot receive the tickets for their families and friends which they would naturally desire. Last year there were eleven hundred and forty-five degrees given. Of the 630 seats, about 270 are given to members of the Corporation, Overseers, friends of gentlemen who are to receive honorary degrees, representatives of the press, Marshals of the different degrees, Commencement speakers and the higher members of the teaching staff. This...
...have the unrestricted use of them. To do this at any time is a disregard of the rights of others which one hopes not to find in this community. To do this in the midst of, examinations, perhaps preventing some man's access to a book which he cannot afford to buy, seems to me additionally reprehensible,--and deserving of an attempt through your columns to reach the "borrower." Very truly yours, CHARLES R. SANGER. June...
...Herald either cannot or will not understand the case as it is. I don't see that it matters at all whether it does or not. But the opposition to the settlement within the University is another matter. The cry of undergraduates for harsher punishment for an undergraduate; the echo in the Bulletin of "the charge that in Harvard College the rich man is treated better than the poor"; are not a little depressing. "The government of a University," says ex-Dean Briggs, "cannot with safety be entrusted to students; they are harsher than their elders and less just...