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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Harvard men and their friends and the promise--which every purchaser of tickets is required to sign--not to sell or give tickets as fees should be observed in the same literal manner in which it is intended. Although we believe that most of the tickets which have been found in the hands of speculators and other undesirable persons in former years went astray through carelessness, fair warning to undergraduates and the unusual precautions of the Class Day Committee should prevent a recurrence of the same trouble this year. Co-operation with the Class day Committee is a requisite...
...some of their best players and runners; but, despite the apprehension that these reports have caused during the past few days, we hope for and expect a two-fold victory. The baseball team has already shown its "fighting" spirit, and we feel that the track team will not be found wanting when the real test comes this afternoon...
...enthusiasm for rowing was more than temporary has been amply proved by the number of crews which have practiced on the river this year. Men with no prospect of making even class crews and, what is better, the kind of men who were classed as "bleacher athletes," have found their place in our athletic world...
...words of "Bright College Years" and Cornell's "Alma Mater," being applicable to no particular occasion, are applicable to any. It seems that some one could be found, who would re-write the first four lines of "Fair Harvard," giving us in their place lines that could be sung appropriately on all occasions; as it is, only for the Stadium exercises on Class Day, and for Commencement are the present words fitting. If Harvard men, graduates as well as undergraduates, would interest themselves, someone would produce words appropriate not only for these occasions, but for all others as well...
...Harvard that there are two clubs or societies for every student, and although this saying is not literally true, there are few interests of young men which are not covered by some organization. It is undeniably a good sign, and the best of it is that each organization has found its place and enough support to warrant its existence. Temporarily, the interest in one activity may dwindle until it is no longer a factor in College life, and it is just this condition which has caught our attention...