Word: parted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...rare opportunities for hearing a Cambridge concert by the University musical clubs, and the reception accorded to these organizations should be such, as to insure the permanence of this custom. Coming on the eve of the Yale baseball game and two days before Class Day, this concert forms a part of the Class Day festivities--one which should be generally appreciated and which should receive substantial support...
...third base, so that in case Leonard is unable to play the entire game, he can be moved in from the field and one of the sub-outfielders put in his place. A. E. McCarty '07, who played on the 1904 and 1905 teams, was out yesterday and took part in the practice...
...matter for regret that the present year has passed without any effort on the part of the University Musical Clubs to keep up the old custom of giving Yard concerts. Evening music in the Yard has been one of the pleasant features of the spring term, and its absence this year has not passed unnoticed...
...objected that the concert to be given in Sanders Theatre as part of the program of Class Day week has been substituted and that Yard concerts would have detracted from the interest on this occasion. As far as the undergraduates are concerned a formal appearance in Sanders Theatre does not take the place of the open-air concerts, for the presence of the Glee and Mandolin clubs would have added a great deal to the informal singing that has been attempted this spring. Nor does it seem probable that the songs, no matter how well-known to the Harvard...
...fitness of the Union for such a memorial. It is firmly established as an important factor in undergraduate life. There is less need to urge a hearty response to any call for subscriptions which may be made. Every man in the University should be glad to do his small part toward bringing future classes into closer touch with the memory of a man who gave to Harvard the best years of a singularly valuable life, and who won the love as well as the respect of countless undergraduates...