Word: good
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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That the young gentleman who wrote this editorial should disapprove of the war and of the American government is distressing, but must be borne with patience. That there are good reasons why every young man in the country who has the impulse to enlist should think twice before he follows it we can not doubt; President Eliot has made for us a very clear and noble aualysis of the different motives to enlistment. But two of the ideas presented in the editorial are so novel to a graduate that I can not forbear a comment. The first is the proposition...
...first round was rowed yesterday. The closest race was between the Roxbury Latin crew and Noble and Greenough's, the former winning out by three feet in very good time. Cambridge High and Latin beat Brown and Nichols by a length; Boston Latin School beat Stone's School by three lengths and Chauncy Hall beat Volkmann's. The crews are of an exceptionally good quality for school crews and the races have fully rewarded the interest taken in them...
...team since the Yale games has been very light, and there has been a complete rest since Tuesday of this week. W. G. Morse '99 has entirely recovered from the slight water on the knee he received in the Yale games. With one exception, the men are all in good condition and capable of doing at least as well as two weeks ago. That exception is F. B. Fox 2L., who fell over a hurdle on Monday and broke a ligament in his left arm. It is doubtful whether he will be able to run tomorrow or not, and even...
...best rendered piece was the "Intermezzo" to "Cavalleria Rusticana." The strings were especially good in this, and were played evenly and with great precision and unity...
...style of story not often found in a college paper, and worthy of more cultivation. "Dexter's Discovery" is a new version of a story we have all read before either in the Advocate or in some other college magazine. It seems rather a waste of good material that so many men should try their hands at this same old theme. The same criticism may be applied to "The Way of the World," which moreover, savors a good deal of "Harvard Episodes." For the rest of the fiction the "Reminiscences of the P. O.," in an interesting account of some...