Word: done
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...shame to let such an excellent custom disappear, especially one in which there is so much to be gained and enjoyed by Harvard men. After all is said and done, there are times when most of us yearn just a little for a touch of that more compactly organized life of the small college--not by any means all of it--but the freer and a little more universal fellowship of those communities which have a different constitution from ours. And the Yard concerts would help to foster this...
...less than a month now before the last race of the season in view of which all of the preliminary work, including the two victories, has been done. At present the crew is by no means a perfect one, but they are rowing splendidly together and with a few weeks of training, especially for the longer distance, should acquit themselves creditably on the Thames...
...University second team defeated the Holy Cross second nine yesterday afternoon by the the score of 4 to 2. The second team's scoring was done by timely hitting and base running, aided by the errors of Holy Cross at critical times. Bush was extremely effective, especially in tight places, and struck out twelve men of a very heavy hitting team. Although Holy Cross secured nine hits to the second team's four, Bush kept them so well scattered that they were of little...
Last Saturday the Freshmen tied Yale in a game of fifteen hard-fought innings, the score ending 2 to 2. Since then the Freshmen have done well in practice, and should be in better shape than last week to put up a fast, hard game. McKay, who pitched the whole game at New Haven, will be in the box again today, while Yale will put in a new man, Hartwell. The Freshmen will have the advantage of playing on home grounds, and the game should be close. Positions in the batting orders have been slightly changed and the two teams...
...practice of working one's way through college; an ordinary "working-student," forced to earn money, is likely, it is said, to sacrifice health, intellectual ideals and social enjoyment; men with uncommon endowments may succeed, the majority must fall. Here undoubtedly is a difficulty; but the writer would have done well to bring out the other side more distinctly-that not a few men work their way without losing the best fruits of college life, and that for some men the necessity of supporting themselves is a wholesome discipline. And what counsel has the writer to give those who must...