Word: lets
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...eating while the "loyal sons of Harvard" stand. True, courtesy might lead them to rise out of sympathy with the rest, but that cannot be demanded. Certainly any reprisal in the way of bread throwing by the resentful enthusiast on his feet is highly out of place. At least let there be courtesy on our side...
...which the minimum is to vote at class elections. Knowledge of the nominees is necessarily small for the great majority of the voters. But better a vote on partial knowledge than no vote at all. The significant thing is participation by all. As long as we have Freshman Suffrage--let the Freshmen vote...
From now on they will push the work actively, and the last excuse of the delinquent undergraduate is gone. Let him remember that his pledge was more than a signification of good will; it was a promise to pay. So long as he holds off from redeeming his promise; so much he costs the committee in time and money, so much he breaks an unwritten understanding between graduates and undergraduates, and so much he hinders the consummation of that end most devoutly to be wished--a new gymnasium...
With the last examinations today, another eighth of College is ticked off for the undergraduate. The Freshmen have become fairly settled; the Seniors, some what depleted by those who leave at mid-years, look down the home stretch. Life is renewed once more. Let us rejoice and make exceeding glad. Let us adopt resolutions to be applied from February to June; let us find signs of human habitation in our late deserted dwelling places; let us rejuvenate a languishing Cambridge...
...means that if you do not get your card signed and handed in by Saturday of this week there will be a great deal of trouble on Monday, February ninth. In view of the rush that always happens in the fall when the same process is being carried out, let us attend to it in time to avoid trouble...