Word: oneness
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Freshman basketball team defeated the Massachusetts Institute of Technology sophomores by the score of 48 to 17 in the Gymnasium Saturday evening. The game was one-sided from the start, as the Technology Team was weak and the Freshmen passed well and played fast. At the end of the first half the score was 26 to 10 in favor of the Freshmen. In the second half, as in the first, the Freshmen showed superior team-play and passing, which enabled them to score on Technology again and again. Boyd was the most active on the floor, and Davidson and Kaemmerling...
...their associations with each other in a high and ideal atmosphere as for the things which are taught and learned. Expressions of his opinions on various subjects in the newspapers he advises to be discredited as he does not believe the press is the proper means of conveying one's opinion on matters of policy...
...Harvard of the future. I feel this very seriously indeed. If I have taught you anything in this course, I have taught you that the institutions which men build up continue to bear influence long after the men who build them have passed away. We here are building up one of the greatest of institutions, and we must live here and work here in such a way that our descendants--our grandsons and great grandsons--will be better men for our having been in Harvard College...
Because of the departure of the University team for New York one rink in the Stadium will be available all afternoon and the Freshman rink can be used from 2.30 to 3.30 o'clock. In the University rink two games must be played each hour beginning at 2.30 o'clock. A list of the members of each team must be sent to the manager of the University hockey team at the Athletic Office after every game. The score of all games must be recorded on the schedule posted in the CRIMSON office on the same day the game is played...
...enthusiasm of the devotion of the undergraduates to all kinds of physical exercises and out-of-door sports. Football, baseball and cricket were played, while boating on the Charles River was a pastime popular with all. There were at Harvard no fewer than 12 boat clubs in those days. One of these, the "Orion," had for its president Charles W. Eliot '53. In early intercollegiate regattas Harvard was usually the winner, but sometimes the prize even then went to Yale. After one of these defeats the officiating clergyman at morning prayers gave out the hymn by Cowper which ends...