Word: shows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...also seven to seven thirt. Before the big parade Which starts at eight in regal state By Holworthy arrayed. Good beef and bread is free to each, So bring a hunger grand, And all bring torches and all bring dough, It will come in nice at each side show, And help to pay the band. Come one, come all, and wear old clothes. For you'll get dirty too If you roll around on the soft green ground At the Senior Barbecue. THE DONKEY...
...earnest, and after Class Day every elm in the Quadrangle will be cut down, in order to make room for the 64 small red oaks which are now being transplanted. The aged trees have not improved during the past few years and this spring only one or two show any signs of life. The authorities have decided that the elms are hopeless and that they must be removed...
...particularly large number of last year's point winners in the intercollegiate track meet have been lost from the various colleges, indicating that there will be plenty of opportunity for newcomers to show their worth. Seven of the thirteen men who captured the championship last year have graduated and out of the 142 points scored in the intercollegiate meet there have graduated from the universities men who have scored 72 1-6 of the points. Cornell is the most fortunate, having only lost 10 1-2 of the 30 1-2 points its team scored, while Yale retains only...
...severely criticized on the ground that there exists no just basis for determining relative rank. Because of the wide variations in the standards of marking on the part of different professors, two pieces of equally good work very often receive varying marks. In certain courses the Rank List will show that about 20 per cent of the members received grade A, whereas in others only 4 or 5 per cent are A men. How, then, are the records of men graded according of different standards to be compared in the award of distinction? Nominally, one man may make a scholarship...
...first glance this sentiment appears somewhat startling. But a second thought will show the statement to be absolutely correct in describing the club situation as all Harvard men should wish it to be. In fact the "power" so-called, of clubs at Harvard, is individually so meagre that a New York newspaper recently published three pictures: Yale's Skull and Bones, the Princeton Ivy Club House, and the Harvard Union, under the general heading of influential college societies. To Harvard men the picture of the Union grouped by the side of the Bones house may have generated a strain...