Word: number
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...number of original subscribers have voluntarily doubled, and even tripled, their first subscriptions, but the local committee declared last night that the Harvard men of Boston must be more liberal in the size of their subscriptions if the remaining half of the district's quota is to be secured within a reasonable time...
...small number of ballots cast in the elections of last Tuesday are a sad commentary on the spirit of the three upper classes in the College. From a registration of 276 in the Senior Class, only 56 votes were cast, showing that four-fifths of the members of that class either take no interest whatever in their representation on the Student Council or are too lazy to go to the polls. In 1921, with a total registration of 553, only 126 ballots were cast, and in 1922, with a class enrolment of 672, only 207 ballots. Added to these numbers...
...when we had practically no men in the stands, we lost. In 1913 and 1915, when we had approximately six hundred in the stands, we won. Some may argue that the number present had no bearing on the games, but the respective results in the score seem due to more than coincidence. A vivid example of the power of "pep" is the result of the Yale-Boston College game last Saturday. Men of the latter institution, who could not afford to go by train, walked part of the way and "bummed" the rest to New Haven. Boston College...
...games of the year is scheduled this afternoon for the Second University eleven when it meets a service team from the U. S. Submarine School of New London on Soldiers Field at 4 o'clock. Although the visitors class themselves as "a light college outfit," there are a considerable number of stars on the team...
Since the last game the University scrubs have suffered a number of injuries, resulting in a considerably changed line-up for today. T. C. Wales '21, the captain, is out of the game for several days; his place will be taken by A. J. Conlon...