Word: might
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...notice of the boat club with regard to the single scull challenge cups, which appeared in yesterday's CRIMSON, should receive the careful attention of boating men in college. A single scull race with as large a number of entries as might be secured at Harvard, could not fail to be of interest to the students at large, and as an almost new form of athletic sports for Harvard, it should certainly be encouraged. We urge boating men, particularly those who have never rowed in class crews, to enter in this single scull race. The fact that another...
...least be allowed to know what they are. Here is the present junior class cut off from all chance of taking such a course, - a course which from its usefulness has become very popular. We have been waiting patiently till we should become seniors, in order that we might have the manifest advantage of just such instruction, and now our hopes are blasted. Let the faculty consider the case fairly, and I think they must see how unjust is their action. Or if it is quite impossible to have English VI, let us, at least, have some parallel course. What...
...loss of our first championship game to Princeton is not so great a catastrophe as many in the college would make us believe. To be sure the unexampled record of last year was a goal which we longed that the nine might again reach, but let us not forget that the winning of the championship is our real purpose, and the chances for this are very good. To be disheartened now would be suicidal; therefore the college should take a still more active interest in the success of its most popular team; and during the coming week, when so many...
...Stillung." It connot but make us proud, as Harvard students, that such work is being done among us. Mr. Leahy, in his story, has touched a note much higher in both strength and purity than is reached in the mass of college work. We would only suggest that he might have gained even greater strength, had he followed more closely the brevity and compactness in the formation of his sentences, which is a strong point of French writers. Mr. Berenson's account of Jung-Stilling is told in an intensely interesting manner, and with great lucidity. The poems contributed...
...first and once in the second, and again in the third. In the 4th with four hits and several errors, Harvard scored seven times. The rain which had begun to fall in the first inning, now increased, but it was hoped to finish the fifth inning, so that it might count for a game. To no purpose, however, for the umpire called time in the fifth inning with Amherst at the bat and two men out. Thus the score, which of course will not stand, was, Harvard, 11; Amherst, 3. Had it been possible to play but ten minutes more...