Word: showings
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...undergraduate life. It is called "Cap and Gown; Some College Verse" selected by Joseph LaRoy Harrison. Mr. Harrison has run through the whole range of college publications and has chosen the verse which has seemed to him most representative of college life. His own words of introduction best show the character of the work. The book he says, "is exactly what its title represents it to be, some college verse - and nothing more." He hopes "that it may find a corner in the domain of lighter verse, that it may be a congenial complement to the old brier root during...
...been most gratifying, and the team deserves the heartiest support of the university. Last year it rained and the crowd to cheer the men was small. This year we want it to be different. We need an enthusiastic expression of interest and confidence from the university at large to show the Mott Haven team that we appreciate what it has done for the college...
...means. There generally comes a point when after some particularly good game the men consciously or unconsciously relax their efforts without thinking of the strain and demands of the final contests. However, the series is ended and Ninety six's record is made. She has three more years to show her merits through her individual members on the 'varsity teams. We sincerely hope that there her success may fully atone for her first year's work...
...that the chance to hear such a man does not come every day and is not to be missed. This is the last Sunday evening that Dr. Abbot will preach to us this year, and if for no other reason than this, everyone should go to hear him, to show him that we appreciate his work among us and that we heartily thank him for what he has done for us and for the trouble he has taken...
...editorials are disappointing. They have not the strength and vigor which ought to characterize undergraduate work here at Harvard. The writers make a mistake, too, in speaking of a class matter in a class spirit; no paper which represents the college at large has a right to show itself prejudiced in favor of one class, as the Advocate does when it says "As a Junior board of editors," etc., "we backed Ninety-four, and we feel as badly about their defeat as they...