Word: seemed
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...university crew went out on the harbor for the first time on Thursday afternoon. They will continue to go out whenever the weather permits. The freshman crew squad has been reduced to four eights. The prospects seem better than usual this year for a very for a very fast crew...
...this discussion may seem rather unnecessary to those who have had no experience with class officers, and the basis of it may seem less real than imagined. To some of us, however, the chance has been given to see a concrete example of class administration which has pointed the way to an ideal. We know that a class officer can be the representative of the class as a body, while he also comes more and more to be the friend of each individual man. We have come to feel that a class should set this standard for its officers. Therefore...
...would be made. At that time, the CRIMSON in its editorial upon the subject said, "there may be some question as to whether a Senior who is also in a graduate school may retain a Yard room occupied in his Junior year. The wording of the rule makes it seem probable that he may keep the room, as such men are understood to retain their undergraduate standing even if they are doing work in the Law School or some other graduate department." So the interpretation presented yesterday in Mr. Mason's letter was unexpected...
...regard to the first consideration, that with reference to the University, the exclusion of graduate students would seem advisable. Those questions as to eligibility which have attracted notoriety in the newspapers of recent years have been chiefly those of graduate students, and whether or not in any such cases there has been anything to bring any just unfavorable comment on the University, the mere circulation of the matter has brought a disagreeable prominence and tended to hurt the University's athletic reputation by such notoriety. If graduates were debarred, such cases would practically disappear...
...fourth consideration, while not upsetting the general theory of graduate exclusion, would seem to limit its application. By graduate exclusion hardships would be wrought on earnest men and good students from other universities who wished to enter into Harvard athletics for the fun there was in them. Such individual injustice, however, for the sake of the general policy, must be overlooked. But the injustice to men who have been through Harvard College and are thus debarred would be great. They are bona fide Harvard men--the men in general the best and most reliable on a team. The records...