Word: likes
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...afternoons when either laboratory work or the thousand and one things a person finds it more pleasant to do on a bright fall afternoon than pouring over a lot of musty books, prevents him from using the library as much as he ought, and as much as he would like to do. Pangs of regret are constantly shooting up in men who use the library but little, and it is in vain that they say to themselves evenings when they have nothing to do, "Oh, if the library were only open now I should use it." Fully one quarter...
...signed was sixty-four. Of this number only thirty-two rowed. Thus one-half of the men should have their entrance fee returned. The management have so far given no notice of their intention to give back the money. As several have made enquiries about the matter, we would like to call their attention to this delinquency...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON:- After seeing a great game like Saturdays-wild enthusiasm, frantic cheering, the great rush at the end, and all the other stirring incidents of the scene-it is most dampening to read the meagre and cold-blooded accounts of it in all the papers. I notice that the CRIMSON even reduces the first individual feat in the game, Boyden's run, to this: "Harvard's down; ball passed back to Boyden," etc. Won't you correct this and put in print that Boyden took the ball running from a long punt at the middle of the field...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON:- I should like to call the attention of the foot-ball management to a matter which deserves to be remedied. While the Harvard eleven retires to the Pudding building in the intermission between the first and second half of a game, the visiting team are allowed to remain out in the field. This is discourteous, to say the least, and the remedy is so simple it ought to be immediately applied. Why should not the visiting team be invited to share what cheer the warmth (?) of the Pudding building will afford...
...insist on crowding into the middle of the field. In spite of this fact the men keep on obstructing the playing of the men just as much as ever. The men coaching the team spend more time in keeping the field clear than they do instructing the players. Carelessnes like this on the part of any men who know the value of practice for the team, and that the foot-ball field is the place for such practice, and not for the spectators to stand in,- carelessness, I say, is greatly to be blamed. Every man can see exactly...