Word: laborators
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...expected, and the college should feel gratified that the loss of the regular catcher, although it has hurt, has not destroyed our prospects of success. Whether the pennant will remain with us or not, we should all feel that whatever success has been gained is the result of earnest labor. Every man on the nine has worked for all he was worth. This is shown in the marked improvement since the beginning of the season. Whatever may be said in the event of our defeat, it is not true that Harvard has a worse, but that Yale and Princeton have...
...same lasting power that it possessed a year ago, it should win both its races. Captain Mumford is to be congratulated upon the excellent work which the crew has done under his captaincy. The crew has worked as hard as all Harvard crews are expected to do, and their labor, we believe, will not be in vain. The college appreciated the exhibition row which was given yesterday quite as much as any favor which has ever been conferred upon her by a university captain; and the enthusiasm of the spectators dispelled all fears that the college had no interest...
This afternoon the 'varsity crew will give an exhibition row, and the captain of the crew is desirous that the students forget their indifference for a time and be present in large numbers, that the labor of the men during the winter and spring may be made manifest to the undergraduates before Saturday, when the crew goes to New London. Boating has always been the stand-by of Harvard athletics, and the contests on the water interests the non-collegiate world more than all the other athletic sports put together. Whoever, then, is not able to see the races, should...
...striking contrast to the successes which most of our athletic teams have gained by labor and perseverance are the pitiful defeats of the Harvard cricket eleven. All our other athletic teams that use the name of their college go into regular practice and training, but the cricket eleven, although a desultory sort of practice is kept up, makes no pretense to keeping those rules and observances which the nine, the crew, or the lacrosse twelve consider as an absolute necessity for victory. It is a pity that Harvard should be represented on the crease in the way she has been...
...interests of society by withdrawing women from domestic life. The first subject undertaken by the Eastern Association was an inquiry into the effect of collegiate education upon the physical condition of women. Elaborate statistics were collected by the Association, and afterwards compiled by the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor. It was the wish of those engaged in the work that these facts should speak for themselves, and the general attention that has been called to them, and the conclusions derived from them by the thinking public, they feel have not been unfavorable to the cause...