Word: friendships
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...manifesting our interest in the result, whether it be in our favor or against us, it will be well for undergraduates and graduates to remember that any disorder on Saturday night would be charged to the game and would, therefore, injure football and out door sports. The truest friendship to the team will be shown by refraining from the kind of "horse-play" which has sometimes followed the games of former years. IRA N. HOLLIS. Cambridge...
...Harvard Lacrosse Club of New York has recently been organized by graduates formerly interested in lacrosse here. Its object is the extension of interest in the game at Harvard and the promotion of friendship and intercourse among former players. H. A. L. Sand '95 has been elected president and R. E. Swezey L. S. '97, secretary...
Wolf's Head-F. P. Loomis, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Guy Wellman, Friendship, N. Y.; A. C. Goodhear, Buffalo, N. Y.; G. S. Chappell, New London, Conn.; A. Marvin, New Rochelle, N. Y.; John Reid, Yonkers, N. Y.; B. B. Moore, New York city; H. H. Hollister, New York city; F. M. Davies, New York city; W. DeL. Kenntze, New York city; R. F. Forrest, Philadelphia, Pa.; B. H. Evans, Pittsburg, Pa.; H. B. Wallace, St. Louis, Mo.; C. D. Berry, Nashville, Tenn.; Winchester Noyes, Brooklyn...
...service as University Preacher. Though, as a graduate of Harvard, President Hyde is one of our own number and doubtless feels a special interest on that account in the service to which he has been invited, yet as the head of a neighboring college, he performs an act of friendship and courtesy in coming here, which cannot fail to be appreciated, especially as it necessitates a complete interruption, for the time being, of his action and valued work as head of a neighboring college. Here is certainly a most pleasing evidence of an intercollegiate fellowship, which no university...
...sticking to her natural rival and making no alliance that could endanger the preeminence of this rivalry. To Harvard we are bound by long series of contests in every branch of sport, by the similarity between the two universities in positions and institutions, by the strong ties of alumni friendships and rivalry, and by our own personal friendship with Harvard men gained for the most part by association at the same preparatory schools. All these things mean much, and have been absolute preventatives to our making binding arrangements with other colleges, which, once begun, could necessarily have no limit...