Word: lose
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Captain Burden, Donald, Boal, Hallowell and Burnett are playing the reliable game they did last year, and Lawrence has overcome the tendency to lose his head and is now a very steady player. Campbell has adjusted himself to the team more easily than any of the new men, and Daly plays the same game as last year. Kendall is a brilliant line bucker and Sawin dodges well, and Ellis's strength is in line plunging, although he is apt to fumble...
...stars. Each man is part of the unified whole. Captain Burden, Donald, Hallowell and Burnett are playing the reliable game they did last year. A. R. Sargent, who has been playing in Boal's place, and Lawrence, both new men on the team, have overcome the tendency to lose their heads and are now very steady players. Campbell has adjusted himself to the team more easily than any of the new men. Daly plays the same game as last year but Reid has fallen off. Kendall is a brilliant line bucker and Sawin dodges well. Warren, Gierasch and Ellis...
...Radcliffe College with Harvard," by Professor Wendell, is most timely. At once vigorous and moderate, the writer certainly carries his point "that unless a strong public sentiment declares itself against the principle of co-education at Harvard, complete co-education will slowly establish itself here," and that we shall lose our "traditional school of manly character." The menace is shown to be real and present. Our only hope, the writer says, lies in the possibility that by proper endowment Radcliffe may continue to grow as "a sweet, sound, every day college for girls," and may cease to encroach on Harvard...
...Voted, That the Dean be authorized to allow students of the first or second year who lose the coming June examinations because of entering the military or naval service, to take those examinations in a subsequent year...
...this morning's issue of your paper. It seems to me to express the position which every student of Harvard should hold. The word to men going into battle is "Steady, men," and I think it applies in this crisis of our national affairs. Those young men who lose their heads at the first beat of the drum make poor soldiers and do not benefit the cause of their country...