Word: likeness
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...another column we publish portions of a long article on "Athletics at Harvard," taken from the Boston Herald. The author of the article is a well known graduate of this college, who, like the great majority of Harvard men is totally disgusted at the phase which athletics have assumed here during the past few years. The successive defeats of Harvard teams are attributed to the intermeddling of the faculty in athletics-an institution which the faculty, in its ill-judged endeavor to remodel and reorganize, has only succeed in working incalculable harm...
...physical comfort is concerned, must have been extremely gratifying to the members of the team. Still, we desire to add one word to those who are still undecided whether or no to accompany the eleven to Princeton. The distance is great, but the team needs encouragement and we should like to see a large delegation sent from Cambridge. The attractions, we may add, are much greater this year than they have been in the past and we believe that no one will regret a decision to accompany the eleven next Saturday...
...gymnasium, even if one of the bowling alleys had to be taken out to make room for them. Before the weather becomes so disagreeable as to put an end to outdoor exercise and compel the students to use the gymnasium more as a means of exercise, we should like to call the attention of the gymnasium authorities to the fact that last year there was great complaint at the wretched bathing facilities offered. The shower bath could not accommodate over half the men who wish to use it. The only resource left was to wait patiently until some...
...Harvard is no worse than any of her sister colleges. On the contrary any unbiased observer will admit without hesitation that in no college in America are the students more gentlemanly than here. Nowhere do they preserve better order among themselves than here; nowhere are hazing and rowdy-like amusements frowned on as here, and nowhere is the "fast set" smaller in proportion. People who have lived in other college towns will admit that no where are the students on better terms with the inhabitants than here...
...number of interesting articles covering a wide range of subjects. The graduate paper is "The Student's Business, a Homily," contributed by Professor L. B. R. Briggs. Critical articles on Harvard life and its influences have been so numerous of recent months that Harvard men are beginning to feel like specimens in an educational museum. If all the criticisms were as good humored as Professor Briggs' we could not complain. He has been most intimately associated with Harvard undergraduates for many years and surely knows whereof he speaks. His comments on the abstracting influence of outside work may seem...