Word: regarder
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...future officers in the Ensign School awake early these dark mornings--so do all the other occupants of the dormitories in the Yard. The first expresses cause, the second result. From considerable experience the civilian students are coming to regard life near the good ship Matthews Hall as extremely rigorous, during the early morning hours especially. Shortly after the zero hour, so it seems to the startled sleepers, the night stillness is shattered by bravely blown reveille. The dreaming student is restored to full consciousness without lingering in any of the intermediate stages. The damage done, he turns over...
Such is the unhappy lot of those who room in the Yard dormitories. The Ensign School is apparently blissfully ignorant and wholly immune in regard to the Parietal Regulations, but one hesitates to think of the student's fate who should as successfully arouse the Yard some-time before dawn. If this nocturnal performance is necessary to the health and happiness of the ensigns, why cannot a more auspicious site be chosen for it? There are a dozen places in or near the Yard that could be selected with better consideration for the comfort of others. The war being over...
...Harvard Athletic Committee and the Advisory Rowing Committee will meet tonight to decide what course of action will be adopted in regard to the crew for the coming season. This question was omitted at last week's meeting by the request of R. F. Herrick '90, that action be delayed until after a consultation with the Rowing Committee...
Professor C. N. Greenough '98, has called a joint meeting of the Athletic Committee, of which he is chairman, and the Advisory Rowing Committee, for Monday evening, January 27. The chief business to be taken up will be a discussion of policy in regard to the crew. The question as to the Yale regatta at New London will be considered...
...Discussion Groups are designed to stimulate and direct the habit of accurate thinking in the student in regard to the pros and cons of current problems. Members of the groups are guided in the discussions by volunteers from the Faculty, who are well qualified to present the problems in their true forms, stripped of interested prejudice and popular fallacies. The large variety of national and international questions available for consideration assures an abundance of excellent subject matter. Not only will members of the groups increase their understanding of affairs of current discussion in the press, but they will derive benefit...