Word: stays
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Saturday afternoon. Prospects for a victory are by no means as bright as a week ago, due to the loss of four good men who for one reason or another will not be able to make the trip. B. Z. Nelson '15 and J. I. Abbott '14 will stay behind on account of pulled tendons, W. W. Kent '16 is out on account of a weak ankle, and E. W. Mahan '16 must remain in Cambridge to play in the Amherst baseball game on Saturday...
...course there would be no organized coaching of any sort; but singles, pair-oars, and even larger crews might be allowed upon the river, as sail-boats and motor boats are allowed on the harbor. An opportunity for the most valuable exercise which is now denied men who stay in Cambridge on Sunday, and granted to those fortunate enough to visit the surrounding country, would then be given...
...question of ability to endure its hardships and to avoid the danger of disease. The immediate question before Harvard students is, "What is the right thing for us to do?" It may be the duty of a man to enter the army, or it may be his duty to stay at home to carry on the affairs of the nation, manufactures, and business; but above all, it should be remembered that it is not the duty of everyone to enlist, and Harvard undergraduates should watch coolly and intelligently to see the drift of national affairs. Watch and wait until...
...wielded by the officers, and nothing can be put in the cogs to impede the action. But before a man goes into the service, he should have it clearly before him that he ought to go. Whether or not many men are needed, plenty of men had better stay at home. Each one must decide for himself, and should bear in mind that, besides the hardships of actual warfare, a great part of the students will return maimed for life and many with broken health; that the suffering will continue through loss of classmates, loneliness, and heartache...
...there are people who would trample out these verdant manifestations; who take out their wanderlust by straying from the numerous paths upon the tender shoots. Of course the grass suffers; frequently it succumbs entirely and the Yard becomes an unsightly jigsaw puzzle. There are paths enough. Why not stay on them and give the grass a chance? And besides, he who wanders from the gravel walks is in imminent danger of trampling upon one of the new and stately oaks...