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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...National Association is tending toward the views of this whom we regarded as mere theorists a few years ago would lead us to believe no small changes is coming. The above three changes would not be opposed by the members of teams themselves. Their effect will take away none of the enjoyment or the value of sport. They will simply remove collegiate athletics a little farther from the realms of professionalism toward which they have drifted much too far, Under the new regime we may not turn out soon perfectly-drilled machines, but we shall turn out as physically...
...spirit of duty, which has formed the most cherished tradition of our college life will be shown not in words, but in the shape of living accomplishment. The University will prove once more that after the lapse of three centuries, the young men of the nation have lost none of the strength or courage of John Harvard...
...experiences in Y. M. C. A. work abroad. Tomorrow, however, members alone will mean nothing. The University must be there. Dr. Mott can always address non-collegiate audiences; his talk here is the only one of its kind to be given,--he is to speak at this University and none other. The assembly then must be of a mass meeting nature and the tickets distributed should not be given out to family or friends; we want the University itself, not its followers. The lecture will be worth while, that is certain, and no one who comes will go home feeling...
Upon the Freshman eleven devolves the duty of upholding Harvard football this year. While none of us now take our athletics as seriously as heretofore, yet in the back of our head there lodges that idea, that conviction, that the University must live up to its record of football. Next Saturday 1921 will meet the Princeton freshmen at Princeton, and the following Saturday Yale 1921 will be their opponents in the Stadium...
...From goal post to goal post we will dash while the artillerymen sit peacefully on their steeds and caissons chuckling inwardly. It is indeed a subtle witticism from the Yale point of view. Except to amuse them there can be no reason for this joust. Crowds there will be none for who will travel to New Haven to see a puny two thousand would-be soldiers, when they can go to Yaphank or Ayer and watch tens of thousands drill...