Word: ought
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...college just what his own particular work will be. This is the first great privilege of student life. A second is the chance to gain a broader outlook upon men and nature. A third privilege is the possibility of forming friendships, intellectual and spiritual, of life long duration. There ought to be a companionship of noble purpose...
While the outcome of the Maine and Amherst games ought not to be disheartening, it is made clear that our football team needs all the backing and enthusiasm the University can give. To that end the University band should be immediately re-organized; the mass-meetings in the Union should begin now; there ought to be frequent processions of the College to the practice; and there should be cheering and singing of the right sort at practice and at every game. The cheering Saturday was well-nigh worthless. The leaders should be men of enthusiasm and vigor-not merely individuals...
Seventy-eight men reported for fall track work on Soldiers Field yesterday afternoon. About two-thirds of the number were new men, and it seems that much good new material ought to be developed. Yesterday each man ran from three to five laps at an easy jog, and the candidates for the sprints did light work on the sraight-away. A squad of about ten men took an easy cross-country run from the Locker Building...
...time has come when something ought to be done to stop the theft of tennis balls and racquets which is now becoming a common occurrence at the tennis courts on Jarvis Field. Now that the Leiter Cup baseball series is finished, Nortons Field no longer offers to "muckers" the opportunity for stealing bats, gloves, etc., that it did before. Accordingly they have shifted their hunting grounds, and prowl instead about the courts on Jarvis Field. Racquets are stolen less frequently than balls, but in either case there is no necessity for such a nuisance...
...slightest act of recognition. To the aspersions "Harvard indifference" and "Harvard snobbery" we are not inclined to accredit a greater basis in fact than to the myriad of similar slanders made against every university by shallow phrase-makers with more time than ideas at their disposal. But it ought to be our care that not a single instance of behavior should occur in our midst to act as an exception to the rule which should need no proving: that courtesy no less than intelligence is a part of our acquirement. That such incidents ever happen we should, attribute...