Word: existance
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...taken last night when President Eliot, Professor Shaler, Professor Lyon, Professor Briggs, and Professor White, addressed the large gathering of new students. As representatives they spoke of the different phases of university life, showing how each depended for success on the other, and giving the true relations which should exist between the students and faculty. In short, no better opportunity of realizing the life and spirit of the University could have been given to the new students than that of last night. We sincerely hope that this custom once established will always be kept up. In no other way could...
When Professor White was speaking before the new students upon the physical and athletic life of the University, he had neither the time nor, perhaps, a fitting opportunity to speak of the exact relations which exist between the Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports and the students. Yet these relations are so important and so grossly misunderstood by the majority of the students that we earnestly hope that some faculty member of Harvard's much abused athletic committee may explain in some way to the great body of the students exactly the province of the athletic committee...
There are but three stories in the number, and by far the best is Mr. Wilcox's "Another Man's Mother." The author has chosen for his theme the description of two types of character which we know to exist at Harvard and with which we feel a sympathy-the easy-going idler with a kind heart and good instincts, and the hard-working grind with high aims and ambitions. The "grind's" mother forms the medium through which good is accomplished for both, and the slight dash of pathos at the end only strengthens a story which is easily...
...plain from the crew manager's report at the freshman class meeting yesterday that Ninety-four is in a bad way. So serious an aspect have affairs taken that it seems doubtful whether the freshmen shall be allowed to go to New London. That such a doubt can exist for a moment is a disgrace to the class which is responsible for the present crisis. There is no use now, however, in blaming the class for what it has neglected to do. If it is any incentive for the class to look back on its record of illiberal giving...
There seems to exist an erroneous impression that H. A. A. membership tickets will admit their bearers to the U. T. A. C. A. Meeting next Saturday. H. A. A. membership tickets will not admit holders to the meeting on Saturday...