Word: obtained
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...present members of either club, who have paid their dues for this year, can obtain new membership cards, without further payment, by applying at the office of the Association. It is necessary that all old members obtain these cards, as no other cards will be recognized at either boat house. No person can row from either the Weld or the Newell boat hose unless he is a member of the club from which he rows, and presents his membership ticket to the keeper of the boat house...
Lists have been made out dividing all the rowing material in College as evenly as possible, but since it has been impossible to obtain complete lists, there may be some omissions. Any man whose name does not appear will please send his name to John L. Saltonstall, 12 Claverly Hall. Unfortunately the list containing the division of the upper class men and Law School men has been carried away by mistake, but it will be printed as soon as it is returned. The division of the Freshmen is as follows...
...thorough and keen competition, the clubs should be as nearly as possible on the same footing. As soon as the new boat house is built the Newell club will have good quarters. In regard to boats and equipment the two clubs will have practically the same. Furthermore, arrangements to obtain the services of Mr. Harry Vail as a professional instructor are being concluded. Mr. J. J. Storrow has consented to act as head coach and general adviser of the Newell, and he will be assisted by several other graduates and undergraduates. The only remaining question, therefore, is that...
...matter of obtaining the degree of A.B. in three years, it appears that the movement to diminish the number of courses needed for the degree has become conspicuous not through Faculty legislation looking to that end, but through natural causes. The cutting out of prescribed courses began in 1890 with Physics A, a course counting towards the degree as two-tenths of a full course. Since then the diminution in courses has been working mainly through the English department. The movement is best typified by the fact that now students who anticipate English a with grade A or B must...
...landscape, is ill-suited for recitation rooms, officers, or a store. What more natural course could suggest it self then to the Corporation than to rent one of these sites to the Union for its building. In this way the Corporation, anxious at all times to get money, could obtain as much income as it does now from the cheap rooms of College House, or from the Co operative in Dane. Aside from all this, a respectable looking club building would go far towards tempering W. D. Howell's remark that "Harvard square is the ugliest spot on earth, outside...