Word: comes
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Seniors will play the Juniors, and the Sophomores, the Freshmen in singles on Jarvis Field at 2 o'clock. The doubles will come directly afterwards, at 3.30 o'clock, each team playing three matches and meeting the same class as in the singles. The two teams that win the largest number of matches tomorrow, will meet on Thursday, when the tournament will be completed. Each match will be for the best two sets out of three...
After the vacation exhibitions will be given at Andover and Exeter Academies, and in the Brookline Municipal Gymnasium. Meets have been arranged with Yale at Cambridge and Columbia at New York. The Intercollegiate Gymnastic Meet will come in the latter part of March...
Andover has already played five games and their greater experience will therefore give them a slight advantage over the Freshmen. Thus far they have not come up to their usual standard, having been beaten by Cushing Academy 6 to 0, by Worcester Academy 5 to 0, and by the Yale freshmen 13 to 0. They have won from the Pennsylvania freshmen 5 to 0, and from Boston College 10 to 0. During the past week they have shown improvement in practice, and the game this afternoon will doubtless be a good test of the Freshman team. The line-up: HARVARD...
...civilized world has come to believe in the freedom of inquiry in all fields, as the best means of progress in knowledge, in manners and in righteous living. Now the field of inquiry from which within the last 60 years mankind has received the largest visible, tangible, concrete, demonstrable benefits is in the field of medical research applied in the medical and surgical art and in sanitary science. If freedom of inquiry be in general expedient and righteous, should not inquiry be free in this most productive of all fields? To secure and maintain this freedom against the assaults...
...attain greater ones, whereas the reverse should be the rule to follow. In their studies, students are inclined to wait for their instructors to tell them how and why to do their work. "The true scholar," said President Lowell, "does not wait for a Professor to come along with a lantern and show him the way. He simply breaks right in without delay, and gets what...