Word: crowds
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...possibility that the scheme will fail or that there will be a rush at the last moment and all will not be accommodated. We must be willing to place the success of the plan before personal interests and go at a disadvantage of ourselves for the advantage of the crowd. There are many who cannot go except at the quoted rates, and it is the duty of every man who intends to go to sign the books and accept the schedule as planned in order that the majority may be able to enjoy the opportunity. Last year Princeton sent...
...Anderson Bridge will be opened to regular traffic off Saturday, October 18, in time for the crowd at the Holy Cross game. President Lowell last Tuesday had the honor of being the first person to cross in an automobile. Although the roadway is passable now, henceforth nobody will be allowed on the bridge until it is formally opened. The contractors want as little hindrance as possible during these last few days of rush work...
...major sport captains, practice in singing the football songs, and a general mingling among classmates and upperclassmen, no man could fail to spend a profitable and enjoyable evening. There seems to be a sort of intangible spirit of enthusiasm breaking out in the College this fall,--the crowd at the football game Saturday showed it,--and tonight every man in 1917 should feel it his duty to get into the swing of it. Therefore, we advise Freshmen to take the bait offered them and make use of this opportunity to imbibe a liberal amount of the College spirit which...
After the very first play in the Maine game Saturday afternoon, the crowd of eight or ten thousand spectators knew what to expect. The score at the end was 34 to 0, and shows clearly that the University team had things its own way. What the score fails to show, however, is that the game had all the ear-marks of the opening game of a season, from fumbling to a complete lack of snap in almost all of the play. What was seen clearest of all was that the 1913 Harvard team needs the services of an accurate punter...
...will think out the questions which we shall encounter,--who will think them out scientifically and earnestly,--who will face them fearlessly, because, remember this, the men who have rarely stood in the forefront of the advance of civilization have not usually found themselves shouting with the largest crowd. We require, above all, courage, and the courage we require is not only the courage of action; it is the courage of thought, the courage of thinking right. If the men in the country who have this feeling would think right, the getting right would follow almost as a matter...