Word: forethoughtedly
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...students that its affairs will be managed, - and managed well - by somebody, calls for a word of warning. In the past the association has been extremely fortunate in its officers, yet this good fortune has been the result of chance rather than that of the exercise of any special forethought on the part of the members of the society. If in the future our track athletics are to be kept up to the standard of former years, we must continue to place men in control of them whose experience has fitted them for their positions. We trust that the wishes...
...been deprived of the use of what is now the best court we have, that back of College House, and that the use of it was finally granted again, only on condition that there should be no further complaint from neighbors. New it was only through the kindness and forethought of Mr. Eveleth, one of the college employees, that such complaint was prevented last Saturday, and if the complaint had been made, we should have lost the use of the court. It seems that players have indulged in three-beggars, and broken panes of glass in Lyceum Hall, and have...
...gain enough from the reading to aid in passing the time. It is true that warm weather is not calculated to inspire a great desire to do anything that resembles work, and that this influence extends to our choice of reading. But if we spend a little more forethought on what we ought to have by us when the desire to spend an hour or two in reading came upon us, we would gain great returns for our trouble. A great part of the aimless reading of the summer is a direct result of pure carelessness. If we should only...
...indifferent student than that elective which is, perhaps, above all others especially fitted to his requirements and future aim in life, but which has gained the rather opprobrious epithet of a "stiff course." It therefore behooves the members of '87 to consider and arrange with no ordinary care and forethought the various electives, which they may select. No college in the country offers such inducements or imposes such responsibilities upon its students as Harvard. Many students while arranging their electives, rely too much upon their own judgment, and fail to consult as freely as they should proper and competent advisers...
...lack of subscribers as the junior dinner was. While we do not apprehend that there will be any trouble in securing eighty names, still we would urge upon each member of the class individually to see that his name is put down on the list. A little forethought in this way will save a good deal of trouble hereafter...