Word: mans
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...sure each man on the track team fights his own individual battle-but in addition each man should help every other to fight. This fighting spirit in the track team is more of a psychological, than of a physical nature. Unlike the baseball team and the crew, the track team can not practice as a playing unit-yet to win they must have that psychological, optimistic team-work...
...yesterday's game at Soldiers Field. The yearling team secured a two run lead in the opening inning due to three Dean errors, and remained ahead until the ninth session. In that inning, four Dean hits tied the score. The game went on for three more innings with no man crossing the plate until the last of the twelfth, when a triple by L. A. Hallock, followed by a hit by C. J. Mason brought in the winning...
...usual, handicaps will be given to all entrants so that no man will be at a disadvantage on account of inexperience. Four cups which have not been competed for since 1916 will be given to the winners who may retain them for one year. The four cups are: Wells Cup, handicap mile, won by W. P. Whitehouse '17 in 1916; S. G. Wells Cup, quarter-mile, won by W. Wilcox, Jr., '17, in 49 3-5 secs, in 1916; Lathrop Cup; 220-yard dash, won by E. A. Teschner '17, in 21.4 secs., in 1916; Mansfield Cup for 100-yard...
...limit arbitrarily a man's capacity for work, to restrain ability, is non-congruent with the ideals and aims of Harvard. An undergraduate may go whither his powers lead him; no cage is placed about him. Our sister universities sacrifice the individual for the entire group, when, if they would but seek them, tasks for all would be found, without limiting the exceptional undergraduate...
Harvard, however, does not choose a small group to act as trustees for the student body. Officers of every description are widely distributed throughout the four classes. The intensity of competition for all important positions automatically impose the necessary restrictions. For instance, Yale forbids--and Princeton proposes to--one man from holding two major sport managerships. Rarely, if ever, has there been a two "H" manager. The results of artificially limiting activities will be a decrease in competition, tending to lower the standards of the positions...