Word: finding
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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There will undoubtedly be a much greater pressure from speculators to secure tickets this year than ever before, and all men who find that they have tickets that they do not need are urged to return them to the management. Tickets will be redeemed at their face value if presented at the Athletic Office before 10 o'clock on the morning of the game...
...been in the United States Navy. Speaking of the new ships now being built, he brought out the fact that the United States was building not because war was wanted, but because war is contemplated as a dread possibility. Mr. Moody closed with an appeal for American citizens to find out what they could do for the country and then to do it to the best of their ability...
...CRIMSON of yesterday morning. Owing to this fact several men who have been training all fall especially for this event were unable to compete. It seems a great pity that men who have devoted most of their spare time since College opened, and perhaps before to this event, should find themselves excluded simply because of mismanagement on the part of those who direct the games. It is to be hoped that in the future the management will throw no such discouragement in the way of those who are trying to improve their own athletic ability and the ability...
President Eliot was the first speaker. He said, in part, that the acquisition of power to work effectively was one of the great benefits of college life. A man should find out while in college just what his own particular work will be. This is the first great privilege of student life. A second is the chance to gain a broader outlook upon men and nature. A third privilege is the possibility of forming friendships, intellectual and spiritual, of life long duration. There ought to be a companionship of noble purpose...
...present, some of the new rules can be discussed only with reference to probability, as their full force has not yet been tested. Of the rules which find more frequent application, the one allowing only four men back of the line when within 25 yards of the opponent's goal would seem to have the most far-reaching effect. As intended, this rule has served to make the play more open and to prevent the continuous pounding of mass plays into the line which has in past years been so wearing on the players and monotonous to the spectators. From...