Word: due
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...opening sale of tickets for the Yale game the demand for seats in the cheering section was ridiculously small. This may be due to dilatoriness, but whatever the cause, it does not promise well for the sort of support which the team should be accorded next Thursday. We realize that there are many reasons which make men prefer seats other than those in the cheering section. Such objections, however, are seldom insurmountable. Harvard should certainly accord to one of her major teams in its most important game of the year, the support which many of our smaller rivals give...
...hope that the opportunity of witnessing upon our own grounds one of the finest intercollegiate track meets ever held is generally appreciated by members of the University, and that due credit is given to those who were instrumental in bringing it to Cambridge again. One of the strongest factors in deciding upon the Stadium this year was the financial success of the last meet, and it is gratifying to learn that Saturday's meet was even more profitable. There was some criticism of the Stadium track last year, but the extraordinary performances made on it Saturday are ample proof...
...nine. They have won two victories over Pennsylvania, 3-1 and 5-1, and have defeated Fordham's strong team, 7-6, Lehigh, 17-0, and Amherst, 16-3. Deshon has proved beyond a doubt that he has no peer in college baseball today, and it is largely due to his masterly pitching that Cornell has such an enviable record...
...sixth and seventh innings on two hits and some errors. The Seniors again tied the score in the seventh, making two runs through a base on balls and a bad throw over first base. The game was clinched in the last of the eighth by two runs, due to errors by the Seniors...
...remarkable that in a college where modern literatures are so eagerly studied, so little attention should be paid to those of Greece and Rome. This neglect is partly due to the worthless utilitarian protest that we should study only things which we can sensibly use in our life, and partly because of the undergraduate belief that in Harvard the study of the classics is not made worth while...