Word: naming
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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After circling around the Yard and accumulating velocity in the most exclusive clubbing centres the party will be trolleyed to the inadequate docking facilities of Boston. Here a floating palace, loaned by a prominent member of the Binnacle Club (who wishes his name withheld) will be awaiting the Happy Picnickers. Boston abaft, the Picnic. Committee will go aloft to explain from a convenient half-hitch in the rat-lines why the Picnic is not to be held conjointly with the Seniors of the Emerson School of Oratory at Fresh Pond, as the Monthly advocates...
...examination paper to the effect that he has not cheated should be infinitely more humiliating to a gentleman than to sit within view of a proctor, yet in some colleges, at least, the honor system encourages the view that such a signature is more binding than writing the name at the head of the paper. To stop cheating by making it unconventional, a sort of infraction of good fellowship, precisely misses the point, which is that cheating is wrong because it is wrong and not because it is either conventional or unconventional. A good illustration of the failure...
...tournament will begin on Jarvis and Soldiers Field next Monday. Blue-books for entries from the three upper classes have been placed in Leavitt & Peirce's; entries from the Freshman class should be made in the blue-book now at the Rendezvous. Each man is requested to enter his name and class in the book and must deposit an entrance fee of 50 cents at the time of signing. The entries will close at 6 o'clock on Saturday...
...writing and deposited in the Leiter Cup box in the CRIMSON Office before 7 o'clock this evening. After that no change can be made in any team until the end of the preliminary round. Any man who has entered in more than one team must withdraw his name from all except one, and leave it, with the name of the team on which he will play, in the Leiter Cup box before 7 o'clock this evening...
...opinions expressed in the 1910 Class Report: "The reason why men keep on taking books from libraries, or tearing pages out of books for other people's use as well as their own, . . . why men do not hesitate to hand in other men's theses signed with their own name, . . . why men get other men to sit in their seats to prevent being marked absent, the reason why they will read off another man's paper in a test or even out and out 'crib' in an examination, is the same in each case. Because the rest of the undergraduates...