Word: statement
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...first place the actual price per man per week will be but a very few cents less than that charged at Memorial. This statement is based on the hypothesis that $3.50 will be the weekly charge which we think is necessary for anything like satisfactory board...
...College is being canvassed for signatures to the proposed association, it being the idea to get an unprejudiced statement of the students' feeling in the matter, before the corporation takes further steps. Members of the University who wish to sign for places in the new dining hall can find blanks at the Office, at Memorial, the Foxcroft Club, the Cooperative, the Library and at the Law School, as well as in the hands of the students who are authorized to collect signatures in the domitories...
...social life, Yet we question whether the careful observer of our evens our nines and our crews today can find that Harvard indifference" governs them even with moderateness, to say nothing of an increasing influence. Nor can we reconcile the writer's protest against this "pest" with his statement in the next editorial that the spirit shown at the Junior Dinner "made one wonder how started the term 'Harvard indifference.' " We would prefer to judge the Advocate by its Second rather than its first editorial and to believe that at heart it agrees with us in saying that "Harvard Indifference...
...statement made in yesterday's papers to the effect that arrangements for football games between University of Pennsylvania and Harvard had been completed, was in advance of the fact. The statement of Professor Thayer was also misquoted. Professor Thayer only expressed the hope that games might be arranged. As early as last January Harvard received an informal letter from Pennsylvania on lining briefly a scheme for games. This scheme has been under consideration and it is not unlikely that an arrangement for games may be agreed upon. As yet, however, there has been nonofficial correspondence on the subject. Harvard...
...insists that only those "accustomed to crookedness and hippodroming cannot imagine that anything in the way of sports can be free from some one or other phase of dishonesty." The second is that the accuracy of the editor's figures suggests that they were obtained from some tabulated statement, like that in the Crimson of February 9, 1893, where the expenses of the Harvard nine were itemized in full; but that the editor preferred to suppress them, and to indulge in his sneer with full knowledge that it was unwarranted and malicious...