Word: man
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...free sittings. All men who are planing to leave Cambridge at mid-years are requested by the committee to make appointments at once. From today until January 20, time will be reserved for them. Since the number of albums is limited by the number of applications received, each man who wishes an album is asked to sign for it, and make a deposit of $2 at his sitting at Tupper's. The price of the album will probably be $5, as in past years. It will also greatly help the committee if the men will fill out blanks, provided...
...Seniors won the class relay swimming championship last night at the Dunster tank by defeating the Freshman team in the final race. O. N. Shepard, H. S. Wyndham-Gittens, W. M. Shonl and R. R. Hellman made up the Senior team, and they will be awarded cups. Each man swam four lengths of the tank, a total distance of about 50 yards. The best time was 2 minutes and 19 seconds, made by the Senior team in the preliminary race with the Juniors...
...course every football man will readily realize that the permitting of the forward pass is a radical departure and will be open up possibilities that are difficult for any one to forecast until they have been tried in actual play. Probably the forward pass will not only result in weakening the defence--in forcing them to play some of their line further back; but it will have a tendency to prevent men in the line from crouching, as they do at present, as it will always be necessary for a player to get quickly be necessary for a player...
...spirit at Harvard today is stronger than when Harvard was itself a small college. Is not this sure evidence that there is something at work in the successive classes that binds men together for life? What is the root of it all? It certainly is not universal acquaintance. The man with the broadest acquaintance is not always the deepest man. Class feeling is built on propinquity and contemporaneousness, which is common to every college worthy of the name. At Harvard this spirit is broader than elsewhere, because the system of studies and living fosters acquaintances, which, though contemporaneous...
...believe that the broad associations of Harvard are of great value in the business world. Segregation of classes limits a man's acquaintance and proves to be a disadvantage to him later in life...