Word: catered
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...year the enrollment of Sophomores in the courses affected had fallen to nineteen. These figures show clearly that elective Composition was popular among Sophomores; and there is every reason to believe that it would be equally popular today. This is the one demand to which the University does not cater. The University lunch-counter forces jam on the unwilling 'Freshman but, after creating the taste, is invariably all out of jam for the Sophomore of average digestive powers. Like Alice through the Looking Glass, he is offered "jam tomorrow and jam yesterday, but never jam today...
...When Mr. Cater was graduated in 1900, Phillips Brooks House had no definite organization, although it had been open for a year. The obvious need for a graduate head led to the present system of management, and Mr. Carter was appointed graduate secretary, in which position he served for two years. In September, 1902, the University Christian Association sent him as its foreign representative to serve under the International Committee of the Students' Y. M. C. A., assuming the financial obligations itself. He went to India, where, as an assistant secretary, he worked among the great universities, in the cities...
...Fund for 1910-11 to the following students: G. E. Akerson uC., of Minneapolis, Minn.; R. H. Allen '14, of Fulton, N. Y.; S. Barron, Jr., '14, of Chelsea, Mass.; W. A. Berridge '14, of East Lynn, Mass.; T. J. Breen, Jr., '14, of West Hingham, Mass.; J. T. Cater '12, of Atlanta, Ga.; A. H. Clifford '14, of Newcastle, Me.; E. T. Cohen '14, of Roxbury, Mass.; H. Daniels '14, of Boston; D. M. Levy '14, of Scranton, Pa.; J. Lorenz '14, of Delphi, Pa.; D. B. McKinnon '14, of Somerville, Mass.; E. F. McLaughlin '14, of Cambridge...
...credit balances. All other minor teams had deficits of varying size that had to be met from the general fund. In other words any advantages that the rule may have possessed have ceased to operate, but its evil effects are as strong as ever. The basketball team has to cater to the public by arranging games in Mechanics Hall, and all the teams have to send their candidates on unfruitful tours through the University in search of support. It is high time for the infeasibility of this system to be openly recognized and for the minor teams to be given...
This evening the University basketball team plays its most important rival, Yale, in Mechanics Hall, Boston. Much as we regret the policy that forces the basketball management to cater to the public instead of the University, the importance of the contest as between college rivals should not be lost sight of for a moment...