Word: respectely
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...White, too, and Mr. Thayer, '79, are men who have the best interests of Harvard athletics at heart. Both men are old members of the nine. Mr. Thayer captained the team in '79, and has since been actively interested in our athletics. Professor White has won the sincere respect of Harvard for his able defence of Harvard athletics this past season. Professor J. B. Ames of the Law school is the chairman of the football committee. He is also an active member of the general Athletic committee. The only other appointment on the football committee thus...
Again, the writer is very much at fault in his conclusions about the statistics used by the CRIMSON. He cannot understand why the recent gains of Yale over Harvard with respect to western men should be called accidental. Taking the Advocate's figures between 1878 and 1886, you will find that the number of men at Harvard from the west rose from 191 to 348-a gain of 157, while the number of such men at Yale increased from 288 to 410-a gain of 122. Perhaps the writer is not aware that Yale has made its extraordinary growth during...
...above argument on the figures in the Advocate. Any one may satisfy himself of its truth in five minutes. It is quite true that the college proper has gained only 13 western men in the past year and has not been gaining as fast as Yale in this respect for some time, but I argue that there is nothing in the least alarming in this fact, because the facts for a few years show nothing of the tendency of the college...
...university desirous of obtaining such employment. For this purpose the secretary keeps a list of graduates engaged in teaching, another of students about to graduate who wish employment immediately thereafter, and a third of students who desire temporary work in summer vacations. The results have been satisfactory except in respect to obtaining advantageous summer employment for students. From one to two hundred students apply for summer work each spring but a comparatively small number benefit it through the secretary's aid. The co-operation of the alumni is requested in all three branches of this work...
...this respect, as we have said, the meetings greatly resemble the Globe theatre services two winters ago in which Harvard students were so greatly interested. At that time the religious tone and feelings of the university seemed to be undergoing something of a crisis; and it was at that point that the great undergraduate body of men showed, by their enthusiastic support of the Globe meetings, that religious tendencies at Harvard were on the increase rather than the wane. Since that time we believe that the religious life of the men here at Cambridge has grown more healthy, and that...