Word: self
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Blanks for undergraduate applications for Class Day tickets may now be obtained at Leavitt & Peirce's and at the Harvard Alumni Association, 50 State street, Boston. Applications will be received until June 11. No application will be received unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope with 12 cents in stamps for postage and registry fee and a check or cash to cover the cost of the tickets desired. The price of Yard tickets will be 35 cents each; of Stadium tickets, $1.50 each; and of Memorial tickets, $1 each. On this set of undergraduate applications the number will...
...Kuttner's revelation of the dietetic secret of Karl Brill's football success. Most of what Mr. Brill is quoted as saying about over-eating is lamentably true, but it should be remembered that one of the Dean's hardest problems every year is to get certain thin-chested, self-supporting Freshmen to eat enough, a task which this article may make all the harder. There are also two pleasantly written descriptions of the new subway and of the new Bussey Institution, which will interest those who happen not to have heard the facts before. And finally, there...
Blanks for the second Senior applications for Class Day tickets may now be obtained at the Union, the Cooperative Society, and at Leavitt & Peirce's. Applications will be received until June 1. No application will be received unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope with 12 cents in stamps for postage and registry fee and a check or cash to cover the amount of tickets desired. On this second set of applications there will be no limit placed upon the number of tickets which may be applied for. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE...
Perhaps you would be good enough to explain to some of your readers, the meaning and purpose of the Freshman Red Book. This book was begun by a self-appointed committee, without the knowledge or consent of the Freshman class. It is an innovation; and an innovation should always be carefully considered before it becomes a fact. Very likely, the Freshman class, if consulted, would approve the Red Book, but as they know nothing about it, it is now greatly criticised. Perhaps it would be a help for all parties, if more was known about it, what its financial basis...
...relative permanent values, even as they stand in the mind of the undergraduate himself. Of course, the disproportion is due in large part to a contrast in the amount of applause won by the two forms of activity in college, for few men at any age are so self-con- tained as to be impervious to apparent estimates of success on the part of the general public. But there is another cause for the distortion of values. Undergraduates are prone to believe that athletic sports are a good measure of red blood, while high rank in studies indicates only industrious...