Word: poorly
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Brinsmade '07 will compete again in the 880-yard run. H. M. Turner '06, who did well in the mile run, especially in the intercollegiate games, should be a very strong runner next year. C. H. Sutherland '06 and S. T. Hubbard '07, who were in poor physical condition this year, and H. F. Miller sS. will also be eligible for the mile run. Very good results are expected in the two-mile run. W. G. Howard '07, M. H. Stone '07 and A. King 2L., who finished fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively, in this event in the intercollegiate games...
...been under the direction of J. M. Groves '05 and W. W. Thayer '06. Next year A. E. Wood '06 and A. N. Holcombe '06 will have charge. Besides the men engaged in other forms of social service, over 100 men have taken part in entertainments at various poor churches, alms-houses, asylums and social settlements. This work has been under the leadership of H. S. Forbes '05 and R. N. Baldwin '05, and has had a notable growth during the year. Next year J. I. White '06 will be in charge...
This year holders of H. A. A. tickets who in previous years have been admitted free to the Harvard-Yale baseball game will have to pay $1.50 for seats in the cheering section. The introduction of these tickets has enabled the poor as well as the rich student to see all the games played by our varsity team. These games are part of University life; they are played by our fellow students and friends, and we all want to see them. We ought then to have this privilege at the lowest possible cost. In the face...
...whole was very satisfactory, as he allowed only two other hits, struck out seven men and gave but one base on balls. Tweed, considering his lack of experience in large games, caught reliably behind the bat, although his throwing to bases was not very sure. The University team, through poor judgment, lost an excellent chance to score in the sixth inning, when, with two men on bases and only one out, Kernan attempted to steal home and was easily caught by McCabe...
...whether it does or not. But the opposition to the settlement within the University is another matter. The cry of undergraduates for harsher punishment for an undergraduate; the echo in the Bulletin of "the charge that in Harvard College the rich man is treated better than the poor"; are not a little depressing. "The government of a University," says ex-Dean Briggs, "cannot with safety be entrusted to students; they are harsher than their elders and less just to persons whom they dislike." For my part, I would rather be caught, at twenty, lifting a bronze tablet out of Brooks...