Word: honored
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...better than to be reasonably discreet in his attendance at recitations and lectures and in doing his work. The College athlete has more than his own interests to consider in this matter; if he is one varsity team he owes it positively to the University, for whose honor he is working. that his studies should not he the cause of his disqualification in any event. A man will keep strict physical training and recognize its value. Yet many from lack of foresight refuse to see the necessity of keeping proper training in their college duties. An indifference to this...
...Saturday the freshman nine will play its first championship game at Princeton. Those who have been through it before know what it is to go to some other town to play for the honor of class and college. The feeling that one is surrounded by a thoroughly unsympathe tic crowd has more than once had a de pressing influence on a visiting team even so far as to turn a probable victory into defeat. Let a nine or eleven realize that in the mass of on lookers, there are some who are in sympathy with them and ready to encourage...
YESTERDAY a portion of the Mott Haven team went to the training table; from time to time additional men will be taken as they prove their right to the honor. This really marks the beginning of the training of the team, although as we all know the squads have been working faithfully since the Christmas vacation. The almost unparalleled success which Harvard has met with in track athletics during the last fourteen or fifteen years has a tendency to inspire over confidence, a misfortune the evil consequences of which we may some day bitterly realize. Just why we have...
...follow Christ are always sinful, but they are always wasteful. They live out of the main current of history. The grandest truths are not to be entrusted to the poorest specimens of manhood. They need and must have strong men. Harvard is to maintain her character for honor, manliness and Christianity, and the students who go from her are to put these truths into active and powerful expression...
...behavior of any one man. Instead of leaving behind a reputation which would not only have marred the success of the dinner, but reflected discredit on Harvard men in general, the class of Ninety-four must have made a distinct gain in public estimation. In this she has done honor to the college. We congratulate her heartily on her sense of decorum, as well as on her manly and enthusiastic spirit...