Word: sevens
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...team work of the Yale seven is excellent, due partly to the fact that six of the members of the team are veterans of last year. While the men are slightly outweighed by the Harvard players they make up for this disadvantage by speed and ability in stick work...
...deficit, and the credit balance every year has sooner or later been used for permanent improvements of some sort. The subscription business, however, has become a nuisance. The Graduate Treasurer's reports show that the number of University teams which collect subscriptions has increased from two in 1898 to seven in 1904. Receipts from other sources have steadily increased during this time, and there is no reason to think we have yet reached the maximum. Expenses have increased, but not out of proportion to the receipts...
...greatly increase the amount of permanent improvements, at the rate of the past five years it would take four and a quarter years with subscriptions or five and a quarter without them. At the rate of last year, it would take three years with subscriptions or three years and seven months without them. Are we willing to be annoyed every year by the subscription men of seven different teams besides class teams for the sake of reducing the time it takes to raise $100,000, by seven months or a year? If we must continue to subscribe would...
...track record. Yale took the lead from the start and gradually increased it from ten yards at the end of the first relay to almost three-quarters of a lap at the finish. The race with Pennsylvania was closer. By the end of the second relay Harvard was about seven yards behind and the last two men were unable to cut down this lead, the last Pennsylvania runner, Taylor, finishing about eight yards ahead of Dives. In the individual contests J. S. Bell sC. and A. C. Cronin '07 secured second and third places, respectively, for the University...
...Raymond, and S. Fish, Jr., of New York City. The four representatives from the scientific department for the Prom. Committee were elected on November 21, and are as follows: J. E. Johnson, floor manager, H. F. Grant, M. H. Bowman, Jr., and R. P. Kinney. Twenty-seven members of the class of 1906 were elected to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa at a meeting held on Wednesday evening...