Word: man
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...program will be the same as given in the previous concerts, and is as follows: 1. Sand Man, Protheroe Glee Club. 2. Flight of the Birds, Rice Mandolin Club. 3. Popular Medley, Arr. by Rice Banjo Club. 4. The Night is Still, Clark Glee Club. 5. Comic Opera Selections, Arr. by Rice Mandolin Club. Intermission. 6. Kerry Mills Barn Dance, Mills, arr. by Rice Banjo Club. 7. A Summer Lullaby, Gibson Glee Club. 8. The Glow Worm, Lincke Mandolin Club. 9. Yankee Dandee, Weidt Banjo Club...
Although we have been made to realize several times this spring that President Eliot's term was rapidly drawing to an end, we can hardly believe that the event has taken place. But today there is a new hand at the helm, and the man who has had the control of affairs at Harvard for forty years has given up his active work. So much has been said of President Eliot in the last few months that we are appalled at the task of trying to express our opinion of him in anything like original words. Public officials here...
...first play, "The Heart of the Irish man," by L. Hatch '05, was suggested to the author by an episode in Charles Lever's novel "Con Cregan." The play is full of rollicking humor, with touches of fine sentiment...
...spite of the track team's defeat at New Haven, Saturday's athletics resulted very satisfactorily for Harvard. It is never pleasant to be beaten, but considering all the attendant circumstances, one cannot help being proud of the team's remarkably creditable showing. In the first place every man was in good condition, and the points lost were simply due to the superior physique of the opponents. There were no cases of overtraining, so noticeable in many Harvard track teams, preventing the winning of deserved points. Everyone did as well as the could be expected to, and several did better...
...candidates for the weight events, which we have harped on so constantly and so unsuccessfully. Yale's three heavy football players who practiced faithfully all through the year naturally had no trouble in winning all points in the hammer-throw, and in the shot-put Harvard had but one man of first-class ability. There must be many men in this College who could have won points in these events if they had only been willing to try, and yet the spirit here is not strong enough to make them...