Word: ever
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...spirit has stirred Cambridge as yet. Up to the present time there has been no section roped off at the Stadium for organized cheering, and no attempt has as yet been made to practice the Harvard songs. On the other hand Cornell has lived for this one game alone ever since their success last year, and the publications at that college have been full of Harvard-Cornell matter all summer and all this fall. The Cornell rooters are to arrive in Boston Friday in time to hold a big smoker for 600 men and work up all the enthusiasm possible...
Harvard University stands for loyalty and fair play more strongly today perhaps than she ever has. It is necessary she should do so in a period as confused and prejudiced as the war has brought to us. Neutrality is a policy befitting a government in an official capacity, but not a sentiment which the individual can arbitrarily assume or profess. Our spirit of loyalty must be felt within and without the College itself, co-operation is as valuable in ideals as in business. Boston papers are daily publishing articles, seemingly unrelated the one to the other, rather contrary...
...will present in New York during the Christmas vacation. It is entitled "Safety First," the libretto being written by John Biggs 1917 and the music by F. Warburton Guilbert 1919, who wrote the songs in last season's show. The Triangle Club has been producing musical comedies annually ever since it was founded by Booth Tarkington...
...ever-growing Freshman Classes raise afresh each year the problem of the new men getting acquainted. This goes farther than the casual "hello," for a real acquaintance with one's class means an intimate friendship with a small number and a psychological understanding of many more. As in all large colleges cliques will appear after the first year. Therefore every possible aid towards unifying the spirit of the class must be considered during the Freshman year...
...indispensible elements. It is therefore necessary to arrange our educational courses so as to combine the two--in other words, to find a third type of man in whom such knowledge will be united. The solution of the problem is not easy, but it is more than ever necessary that at the present time such a new type should be evolved and developed. Boston Journal