Word: shows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...baseball game with Yale this afternoon promises to be a fight between two very evenly matched teams. Although Harvard has won more games so far during the season, the Yale schedule is considered to have been harder. A comparison of the teams shows that while our opponents appear to have a better pitching staff, we are perhaps better in the field, and our hitting this season has been more consistent than for several seasons past. The last few games have made it evident that the members of the team are able to work together at critical periods. Coach Sexton...
Particularly for the entertainment of visiting Harvard men, the Harvard Club of Boston has hired Symphony Hall, with the "Pop Concert" orchestra, for the evening of Commencement Day, June 28. In addition to the musical numbers, there will be an amateur vaudeville show...
...year 1911-12 a friend of the University offers a prize of fifty dollars, to be awarded to that undergraduate in Harvard or Radcliffe who shall show, in a special written examination, the best acquaintance with the contents of the Old Testament. This examination will take place just before the beginning of the final examination period in 1912." This prize is open only to undergraduates...
...years, on the ground that in succeeding years they might find order activities more absorbing, and thus fail to qualify for election under the present system. To some people it might almost seem that the present system is for this very reason better, since it requires a man to show that during two or more years he has the ability and the energy to do work of a high order. As a matter of fact, a man who has attained distinction in courses no more advanced, let us say, than German A, or History 1, has by no means proved...
...might be answered that while the work of first year courses is, in the main, introductory, the number of men in the courses make more unusual work necessary for a high mark than in many of the smaller more advanced courses. The figures of the past few years show that the number of Sophomores in the first groups is considerably smaller than either Juniors or Seniors, and the conclusion might be drawn that the work is therefore comparatively less easy...