Word: seeing
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...forced to admit that we cannot see the wisdom of such a ruling. If a man is so fortunately equipped that he can play on some team throughout the year and still keep up his college standing, he should be allowed to do so. As soon as it appears that he is neglecting his studies, he can immediately be prevented from taking part in athletics. We do not believe that a man's enforced abstinence from University sport during a season will increase his desire to work, but rather that an athlete constantly training will make sure that his record...
...considerably smaller than last year's, the fact that nearly 200 men are taking part is a convincing proof of popularity. Since the plan was inaugurated two years ago, its success has ensured it a permanent place in the track season. The coaches are given an opportunity to see the relative advantages of all the candidates for the team, the monotony of the long winter season is broken, and a great many men are given an opportunity to take part in one of the most healthful branches of athletic sport. This year especially, when the prospects of a winning team...
...dormitories are not what they should be. Of course they are habitable; at times they are even delightfully comfortable, but we, as Harvard undergraduates, are not proud of them, nor are we content with them. We do not wish to blow up our Gymnasium, but we do wish to see it superseded, just as we wish to see our College dormitories modernized...
...intention of the Speakers' Club to give a play this spring shows a commendable abundance of zeal applied in the wrong direction. When the club was started it was hard to see just why it was necessary with the apparent activity of the Debating Club, but there always seems to be room here for one more organization, and the Speakers' Club became quite successful. Now comes the announcement that it intends to branch away from academic pursuits and "appear in public on the stage...
...believed in the marvellous growth of good from humble beginnings. Our life should be one of sacrifice. In the utterance, "For he that hath to him shall be given; and he that hath not, from him shall be taken away even that which he hath," we at first may see an element of injustice. But as we study it more carefully, we realize that it is but another phase of Christ's belief; the ability to attain any goal comes not so much from the possession of power as from the exercise...