Word: nevers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...taken. The race was rowed against a high head wind over a mile course from a point just below the Harvard Bridge to the finish at the Cottage Farm Bridge. Just after passing under the Harvard Bridge Trump took the lead away from Eaton, and after this was never headed. Trump rowed in a compromise, which gave him an advantage over the others who were all in single scills as it was much better suited to the rough water. S. Royce '10, who finished second, showed the best form, and by a good spurt in the last quarter...
...eager to retaliate for the long list of defeats. If Hicks is in form, and there is every reason to expect that he will be, Harvard should have a decided advantage in the pitching department, as White has not shown himself to be particularly effective. Hicks has never pitched a full game against Princeton. Last year he pitched the last two innings of the Cambridge game, and two runs were scored against him. The University team will have to hit with greater regularity than it has of late...
This spring the club is branching out in a new direction, with four one-act plays, all of which have been written by men who have never had plays produced on the professional stage. The casts are not limited to those who took part in last fall's production, but show that the interest in the undertaking is spreading throughout the University. We wish the Dramatic Club all the success it deserves, and trust that next year it will continue as fortunately as it has begun...
...spite of the track team's defeat at New Haven, Saturday's athletics resulted very satisfactorily for Harvard. It is never pleasant to be beaten, but considering all the attendant circumstances, one cannot help being proud of the team's remarkably creditable showing. In the first place every man was in good condition, and the points lost were simply due to the superior physique of the opponents. There were no cases of overtraining, so noticeable in many Harvard track teams, preventing the winning of deserved points. Everyone did as well as the could be expected to, and several did better...
...they have always been only too glad to come to his addresses. At Freshman receptions, at meetings of the Union, at Brooks House conferences, at academic meetings in Sanders, at dinners and at other occasions without number, he has spoken on subjects of every description and he has never failed to interest and delight his hearers. Whatever the matter at hand, the speaker's breadth of vision and masterful handling have astonished his audiences, accustomed as they are to hearing men with only one subject, and hardly able to conceive of one individual who apparently knows a good deal about...