Word: manned
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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GENTLEMEN:- No Harvard man who has in recent years attended a Princeton game and heard Princeton's slogan of victory, "Palms of Victory, Crowns of Glory," etc., when the team gets ahead can have failed to be impressed, and to wish that we had a slogan. The special songs which are gotten up for the different games are all right, but it seems a pity that we have no slogan which can be used at any and all games. With a view to stimulating some one to produce a slogan which is really good, I venture to suggest...
...have been so well qualified for the position as other undergraduates, who would probably have been elected by a mass meeting. On the other hand, there is a popular superstition that when students gather together in a mass meeting, they immediately lose their heads and vote for the wrong man. Even granting that this may be partially true, it seems that the small body of students who now choose the committee might be more representative. As it is now, the Cycling Association and the Cricket Club have as many votes as the Football Association and the Crew. Professor Hollis...
...that the purpose of all these societies is the same, namely, to make more real the individual religious life of Harvard men. It is planned to hold these union services about once a month during the college year. At each meeting an address will be given by some prominent man who will be selected, not because he represents any particular sect, but because he is known to be interested in students. The meeting tomorrow evening will be addressed by Dean Hodges of the Episcopal Theological School. The religious societies cordially invite all members of the University to attend...
BOXING.- Do you want to take boxing lessons? If so there is no better man than Wm. S. Gordon, who has been appointed instructor at the Gymnasium. Lessons at Gymnasium or at rooms. Wm. S. Gordon, New England School of Boxing, 127a Tremont street, Boston...
...this simple acknowledgement of our debt to the librarian we would only add our testimony that the man was equally worthy of esteem and honor; and that he was in all things a good and faithful servant of Harvard University...