Word: crowded
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...immense resources. Phillips Brooks House is fully acquainted with these needs. It only lacks the men to meet them. Aside from the time given for preparation, such work rarely requires more than one evening a week. While many men feel that their time is too full to crowd into it another activity, the manner in which they meet this appeal from the less fortunate is a fair indication of their future usefulness. Men who have done this work assert to the fact that the value of the experience repays their time many fold...
These former students are now coming back to complete their education, but they will not tolerate the lack of vision with which so many of our colleges endeavor to crowd all their students into one little field for their recreation. They will still want intercollegiate competition, but they will also demand that the student spectators shall likewise be athletes. I think that some of the changes they will demand may be included in the following...
...then up to the lower classes to make Class Day a success. From the Juniors fifty ushers are needed for duty in the Yard, from the Sophomores and Freshmen must come the crowd to fill the Sever stands. It is not much that the Seniors, are asking of us and it is the least we can do to make their departure from College as pleasant as possible. Many of us many never have a chance to see their own class graduate, some of us will never graduate at all, but everyone should make use of the opportunity to see this...
...race did not start until the arrival of the crowd from the Yale-Harvard baseball game, so that it was 6.45 o'clock before the crews were started. For the first mile the race was close, with Yale holding a small lead despite the fact that the University crew was rowing a pace from two to four strokes higher than...
Yale has come, high in the prospects of victory, and has gone, with hopes justified and fulfilled. Before a crowd which resembled more that of a minor contest than of a great intercollegiate game, her team has shown itself superior and has carried off a well-earned victory. Concerning what has passed, we do not begrudge Yale men their fortune. We have no excuse to make nor alibis to offer. A season which began favorably with a Princeton victory has taken an unfavorable turn. There is but one answer which our team can make. It will require a great deal...