Word: mr
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Mr. Bellows, in the leading article, dis- cusses clearly and cogently a subject the importance of which no one will question, "Harvard Admission Requirements." The writer aims "to point out certain things in the present system which appear to produce bad results, and to determine what subjects the College clearly ought to require for admission." Members of the Faculty, as well as undergraduates, may well read this article with attention. The Editor of the Monthly, however, in his comments on the subject, is mistaken in thinking that "the citadel of election" may already have fallen. Neither President Lowell...
...football squad of 25 men, accompanied by its coaches and trainer, and Mr. W. H. MacKinnon, of the Athletic Office, will leave the Square at 12.15 o'clock with the University squad. The Freshman squad will spend the night in New York and will play the Princeton 1913 team tomorrow afternoon at Princeton. The following men will be taken: E. Bradley, M. F. Carr, T. Chadwick, G. C. Cutler, Jr., R. G. Ervin, S. Felton, H. B. Gardner, L. Godfrey, Jr., A. M. Goodale, Jr., E. P. Graves, Jr., E. A. Graustein, P. M. Hollister, B. N. Jones...
Again, in 1879, there was a threatened repetition of these horrors. There was a partial blight and many evictions followed. It was then that the Land League was formed by the peasants to try and better conditions. The next year Mr. Gladstone turned his attention to the land troubles and secured temporary relief, by the passage of a bill, until in 1885 the great Land Purchase Act was passed. This measure provided that after the landlord and tenant had agreed upon a fair price for the land they should jointly apply to the state which gave the purchase money...
...Connor, M.P., will speak in the Living Room of the Union tonight at 8 o'clock on "The Passing of the Old Ireland." The lecture will be open only to members of the Union. Mr. O'Connor is one of the Irish members of the House of Commons and is therefore a powerful factor in the coming parliamentary election. In his fight for home rule for Ireland great expense must be incurred, and it is to get funds to carry on this election that he has come to America...
...interclass tennis tournament will begin tomorrow afternoon. Before then the captain of each team must have tried out his material and chosen a team of six men. He must then have the players on his team approved of by Mr. Cram, the Recorder, in University 4, and file their names, indicating how they will be paired for the doubles, in the CRIMSON office before 7 o'clock tonight...