Word: one
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Efficiency brings pleasure with it, and a pleasant life is the most efficient. College is often said to be a place of preparation for life, but it might better be said that college is life under peculiarly favorable conditions. In closing, Dean Fenn referred to four types of students,--one whose ideals are too high to be agreeable to those with whom he associates; another who feels that his poverty prevents intimate friendship with his fellows; the modesty of a third leads him to a false conceit; the last comes to college expecting to be snubbed and in so doing...
...constitution of the Student Council, the nominating committee has prepared nominations from the three upper classes for the two delegates at large to be elected from each class. The elections will take place next Monday evening. Additional nominations may be made by petition of fifty members from any one class. Such petitions must reach the nominating committee before Friday...
...this committee shall publish on the first Monday after the opening of College in the following autumn a list of nominations for the delegates at large from each of the three upper classes (not more than six from each class to be nominated). Additional nominations for delegates from any one class may be made by petition of fifty members of that class. Such petitions must reach the no- minating committee before 6 P. M. of Friday of that week. (4) Each class shall elect two delegates on or before the second Monday after the opening of College. (5) Within forty...
...first touchdown was the result of a punt which Yale recovered less than ten yards from the Syracuse goal and carried over the line in one play. Just before the close of the half Daly kicked a goal from the field from the 35-yard line. The only score in the second half came from a forward pass, which Vaughan, the Yale end caught on the 10-yard line and carried over for a touch-dawn...
...torchlight parade is the accepted Harvard way of expressing undergraduate enthusiasm on great occasions. In this college generation there have been two celebrations of the sort, one to mark the tercentenary of the birth of John Harvard, and the other as the culminating feature of a political campaign. The present circumstances have more direct interest for the students than those attending either of the other parades, and consequently there is greater reason for wishing to make as impressive a showing as possible...