Word: likes
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Dartmouth in case today's game is not played and Harvard defeats Yale. Both teams are limited in the number of trips they can take, and both are laboring under financial disadvantages. We hope that the building of an indoor rink in Boston will prevent the recurrence of a like dilemma, or that the Athletic Association will see fit to provide some means by which the hockey team can be sure of good ice throughout the season...
...such men could be made to realize what the vesper services are really like, we think enough of them to believe that they would attend with moderate regularity. For on every Thursday afternoon during the winter there is an opportunity to hear a very good choir, trained by a skilled leader, render a uniformly excellent program of spiritual music. The men who conduct, the services are always well worth hearing, and the time of day cannot be regarded with the aversion which is bestowed on the hour of morning prayers. Afternoons spent in this way will be remembered with pleasure...
...must labor this spring. Yale will play 35 games in case of ties and six of these will be against professional teams. The University team is never allowed to compete with any but amateur nines, and thus loses some very valuable experience, for in every game with a team like the New York Nationals a great deal is learned. Princeton usually plays over 30 games and meets several professional teams. It is impossible to estimate the great amount of good derived from actual games as compared with the less interesting and instructive practices, and the University realizes the size...
...shall not justice be done him now? In fact there is a suggestion of Poe in "The Cat and the Mouse"--an effective story, with some thing of Poe's grim despair and situations full of horror; the tone is different from Poe's, but a result like his is gained. In "Will Ellis" a situation is described in which a tragedy is inevitable--the passionate protest of an ignorant mountaineer against the invasion of his domain by a railway; the tragedy comes quite naturally. "A romance in red" is an anecdote, full of quiet humor, with an undercurrent...
...should attempt because other freer men will not. What is the remedy? Make sure that the man appointed is not already burdened with more than he can carry. Strive to bring out more men in each class available for offices by a wider selection of committees and the like in the early part of the life of the class and have more respect for the man himself...