Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...another column we publish an account of the match last Saturday between the Harvard Shooting Club and the Wellington Club. The result was very favorable to our team as will be seen by the score, for it must be remembered that the Wellington Club has a great reputation. A week from Thursday a match will be shot with the University of Pennsylvania team at Watertown, which will excite great interest, as the Pennsylvania men come determined to win and wipe out the two defeats which they suffered last spring from Harvard, one match here and the other, a live-pigeon...
...publish today a short resume of the majority and minority reports of the Committee from the Board of Overseers on the condition and conduct of athletics at Harvard. The report of the majority is open to criticism. Many of the facts therein detailed are undoubtedly true, but it is difficult to understand how a fair-minded body of men could have clamly and deliberately drawn such an exaggerated conclusion as the recommendation of the entire abolishion of intercollegiate contests. This conclusion is not justified by the premises, as any candid observer of both sides of the question must allow...
...another column we publish an extract from a communication written to a New York daily by an alumnus of our college, in which the writer finds fault with the manner of awarding deturs and scholarships in vogue here at Harvard. Although Mr. Harlow states that he knows "wherof he speaks," he is evidently laboring under misapprehension on several points. In the first place, one half of the men in college do not compete for scholarships, as he states. Statistics show that only about one fifth of the men in each class apply for scholarships, and of these fully two-thirds...
...Club reserves the right to use and publish any of the compositions...
...publish today a criticism of an article on "College Expenses" which appeared in the last number of the Monthly. The writer of that article took the position that the opinions of the outside world in regard to extravagance at Harvard are erroneous and he endeavored to support his case by a table of statistics which he claims to have collected very carefully. Our contributor who supports substantially the views of Professor Palmer on this subject, asserts that Mr. Leighton, the writer of the article above mentioned, has not only not proved his conclusions, but has in fact proved just...