Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON. -Is it not possible for the junior class to have another class dinner? We all remember how successful the only attempt in that direction was last year, and it seems a shame that such an enjoyable occasion as a class dinner should come but once during our college course. It is true '84 tried to repeat their dinner in the junior year and failed, but it does not follow that '85 would be equally unsuccessful. Classes here before, I believe, have had successful junior dinners and '85 would do well to follow their example. If a class...
...EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-It seems to me, now that the feeling of the large mass of Harvard men has been so well set forth in the letter of Prof. Richards of Yale, and in yesterday's communication to your paper, that it would be only fair and just for a leading member of the Harvard faculty to let the students know the reasons that actuated the large majority of the faculty in accepting the resolutions. The faculty, I hear from a private source, almost unanimously rejected the preambles. The preambles then were not our faculty's reasons for their action...
...EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-In a recent conversation with a graduate of Harvard in the '75's, now an instructor in a Harvard preparatory school, I listened to some very emphatic opinions concerning the recent athletic regulations. "At first," said this gentleman, "I could not believe that the regulations were anything but a hoax. I cannot explain them now. How can they be true? What has called them forth? They seem to me utterly unreasonable. The students, of course, are placed in a position at once embarrassing and oppressive. But the faculty, I think, occupies the worst position. This action...
...EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-The air is filled with denunciations of our faculty. Indignation meetings have been proposed, and dynamite will soon be resorted to. If, in spite of these warnings, the faculty will persist in their ruinous career, a calamity must inevitably follow. But let us consider the matter in a slightly less nihilistic way. What justification have the faculty for their actions? In a conference held in New York, a number of professors, representing all the Eastern colleges of any importance, decided that the professional spirit had entered to a too great extent into almost all our college athletics...
...EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-It seems absolutely necessary to me that the faculty should fully understand the position taken by the students in regard to the matter of the new athletic regulations, and as the college papers have as yet failed to present that position as I conceive it to be, I shall endeavor to express what appears to me to be the student feeling. If I am mistaken in my interpretation of that sentiment, I do not doubt that I will soon be corrected through your columns. In the first place, I should like to have it understood that...