Word: non
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...given as an excuse." These men should be reached by Mr. Lunt's summing up of a true and remarkably well-written article--by the final paragraph in which he suggests that an attempt should be made to realize what Harvard would be today if the Union were non-existent. "The Union," he adds, "has taken so great a hold on us that no one can understand how Harvard students of days before the Union got on without...
...clock, and a spread in Sanders Theatre from 11.15 to 1.15 o'clock on the day of the Yale game, November 20. The table d'hote dinner, open to ladies accompanied by members, will be served at the rate of 75 cents to members and one dollar to non-members. Free tickets to the spread in Sanders Theatre will be issued to all members not applying for seats in the Hall...
...lies with the irregular system under which the sport is carried on, and that a change in the present short-sighted economy of the Athletic Association by which a good coach and trainer may be provided for the cross-country team will be found to be the remedy for non-success...
...organized cheering has any effect upon the playing of a football team, and it is generally conceded that it has, the least that the non-contestants can do is to give the eleven their heartiest backing. Good cheering without practice is impossible, and for this reason every undergraduate should consider the mass meeting this evening his most important engagement. We have been out-cheered and out-sung--and on our own field--by every college which we have played this season. After so late a start, it is only by the keenest interest and co-operation of all, that...
...dividend of 8 per cent, would not be possible were it not for the large amount of sales to nonmembers who draw no dividends on their purchases, yet whose patronage contributes to the amount of net profit available for distribution to those purchasers who are members. Sales to non-members during the year amounted to $117.000, an indication that a considerable part of the Co-operative's trade is not drawn to its counters by the expectation of dividends, but by the idea that quality, or prices, or both are more satisfactory there than elsewhere...