Word: presents
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Faculty of Harvard University has been considering seriously the advisability of establishing compulsory physical exercise for all undergraduates. The Overseers have recommended such a course for the Freshmen, and during the present week some definite plan for next year may be adopted. Other universities and colleges will be apt to poke a great deal of fun at Harvard for allowing such tremendous liberties in courses, attendance, religious worship, etc, only to draw a disciplinary line in athletics. In other words the Faculty will say the soul may go to perdition but the body will be kept healthy by law. After...
...dinner will be held on Monday, June 27, at the Hotel Vendome, Boston. Members of the Senior class who intend to be present will please sign the blue book at Leavitt and Peirce's. The expenses of the dinner are furnished by the class fund, but it is necessary for the committee to know how many men will attend, in order that due provision may be made. Consequently all such Seniors are earnestly asked to sign the blue book at once...
...matter-of fact business man, who is unexpectedly disturbed in his regular routine of life. "His Duty to His Country," by W. R. Castle 1900, is exceedingly timely and very much to the point in plot, for there must be some men who have other motives for enlisting at present than their duty to their country alone. "A Birthday Telegram," by A. S. Friend 1900, and "From Him That Hath Not," by H. M. Adams '98, are pathetic little tales, the latter a particularly delicate sketch. "Facilis Descensus Averno," by M. Seasongood 1900, is slight but amusing. The poems...
...number might almost be called the spring short story number as none of the stories are complicated; neither are they very serious. Judging from the last and the present number there are a good many excellent story tellers in college at present, and work of the order mentioned is deserving of much encouragement...
...collecting here or anywhere know but too well that the only way to get money out of a man is to "dun" him in person. The postal card method has been tried before on classes which in the end subscribed liberally toward their crews, and found decidedly wanting. The present Senior class, which has now a large surplus in its crew treasury, will remember that in its Sophomore year, over-confidence in the postal method nearly proved disastrous. A very possible solution of the present problem may thus be for some 1901 men to volunteer as collectors and get right...