Word: groups
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...they must have definitely decided to abide by the results of the allotment, for there can be no option as to accepting the assignments if their applications are successful. In this connection it should be clearly understood that, as the committee does not assign the rooms within a given group, men applying in groups must be prepared to allot the rooms among themselves, and furthermore, to stay together regardless of any difficulty which might arise over a slight preference in rooms or any other matter...
...pathos, a good deal of humor, and a striking power of seeing in vivid pictures, make this an uncommonly telling piece of writing. Nobody has better expressed the half-lost feeling which the Yard in July gives the "regular" than has Mr. Moore when he speaks of a group of undergraduates "feeling as if Harvard had suddenly married again, and they were step-children...
...support were manifested. A committee representative of every interest in the class will be appointed and will welcome suggestions and advice on the subject. The present method of assignment by lot of not more than four rooms will be replaced by the new system, which will enable a group of form 14 to 16 men to take a whole entry, thus making it possible for friends to get rooms together without being subjected to a chance assignment that may separate them and put them alongside men with whom they have no common interest or are not in the least congenial...
...fault of the present system is that the groups are made up, and rooms are assigned to them without any relation to one another. A group of four, or even of two, may be and usually is, a self-sufficient unit, for by Senior year friendships are so firmly established that residence in the same entry is not enough to break down the barriers of reserve established by several years of non-acquaintance. That these conditions will be much changed by allotment by entries or in large groups, is not evident. The merit of the scheme seems to be altogether...
...difficult to pick from the many suggestions made by the Football Rules Committee a related group of changes which would be likely to remove the dangerous elements of the game without radically changing its nature. Inasmuch as all three of the groups contain suggestions on the forward pass, it seems as if this football curiosity would finally be abolished or else developed into a dependable play. In the past this play has been important only in opening the defence, and the actual use made of it is almost negligible. When the number of men eligible to receive the pass...