Word: draws
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...meeting of men interested in the formation of a Cosmopolitan Club, as outlined in the CRIMSON of December 4, was held yesterday afternoon in the Union. The principal business of the meeting was the selection of a committee to draw up a constitution for the proposed club. This committee will gather all the available information possible regarding the similar clubs at the Universities of Michigan and Cornell, and will base their action on this information. The constitution will be presented to the larger informal organization on January...
...tournament was held on December 21, 23, and 24 at the West Side Republican Club, New York. In the first day's play Columbia took the lead by winning three out of four games with Yale. Princeton took second place from Harvard by two victories, a draw, and one defeat...
From the contestants in this tournament a team will be picked which will play a picked team from Oxford and Cambridge some time in March for the trophy presented by I. L. Rice. The match for this international trophy last year resulted in a draw...
...CRIMSON publishes today an article by Robert Fulton Cutting entitled "The Organization of the Civic Conscience." This article will be the first of a series written especially for the Intercollegiate Civic League by men of both political parties who are prominent in political affairs and wish to draw the attention of college men to the necessity for more educated men in politics. The Intercollegiate Civic League, which has solicited these articles and forwarded them to a number of college papers for publication, is composed of 26 non-partisan college clubs, devoted to an interest in public affairs. The Harvard Political...
...power of triumphing over obstacles and difficulties that are constantly increasing. To the crowd it seems that things must ever remain as they are; it is the part of the leader to see things as they ought to be. The fear of change makes the ordinary man draw back-the fear of being thought eccentric, or of being thrust into obscurity by the crowd. It is the Christian watchword that responsibility rests on the individual. Wills have been given us-let us use them. Fate, heredity, chance,-these do not affect the freedom of the will. It is a ship...