Word: failing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...sent out for applications received after this evening. Anyone who wants an application blank or wants to ask any questions or make arrangements for boxes can see H. A. Murray '15 at Phillips Brooks House this afternoon between four and six o'clock. Send in your applications now without fail to W. H. Claflin, Harvard Union...
...which had occurred to them. We are glad to know that attendance at meals in the dormitories will not be compulsory, that men will not have to be in at ten or out all night, and that the Goodies will not be used as spies on innocent Freshmen who fail to make port before the cold gates of the buildings close. We ought to wonder how we ever conceived of such dreadful things. Probably this primal simplicity will become a little complicated as experience teaches wisdom, but we may be certain that in this case real red tape will always...
...connected with any team may sign the blue-books, but must not fail to designate what position they wish to play. Such men will be assigned by the committee to fill any vacancies. Any failure to observe the above rules will cause disqualification. The series will start immediately after the Christmas vacation, and the games will be played on two rinks on Soldiers Field, one of which will probably be located in the Stadium and the other back of the shooting traps...
...undergraduates to take training-ship cruises that was suddenly abandoned when it had every prospect of success. But the military camps have passed through one successful season, and President Lowell is today in New York to discuss prospects for the coming summer. The active, healthful, outdoor life can not fail to be of benefit; but, further than this, there is the discipline of the military training, valuable in peace as well as in the event of war. Considered as a profitable way of spending the long vacation, for those who are still undecided, the idea is at least worth serious...
...Institute. The course which is particularly worthy of notice at this time is Mr. Noyes's series on "The Sea in English Poetry," which has been so popular as to warrant the scheduling of its repetition. Those who heard the English poet in Sanders Theatre last spring will not fail to appreciate the beauty of his work and its appeal to the emotional as well as the literary sense of his audience. The opportunity to hear him again should not pass unchallenged...