Word: students
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Again we strongly urge every student in the University to bear in mind the few regulations that have been made concerning a celebration in case of a victory over Princeton today. There must be absolutely no use of fire-arms or explosives of any kind. This is the main thing to remember, and, as we said yesterday, every man should feel it his duty to aid the committee in promptly suppressing any demonstration of the wrong kind of enthusiasm. If student opinion is strongly expressed against this sort of thing there will certainly be no trouble tonight in case...
...great baseball game of the year is to be played this afternoon on Holmes Field. To the average student this game means more than almost any other contest of the year. Our Nine has proved that it can play good ball, and we expect it to win the game for us today. Every man on the Nine must go on to the field with a fixed determination to come out ahead, whatever happens, and must remember that his victory means everything to his fellow students. There must be no loose or careless playing by any one, for this...
...next celebration, whatever it be, than is clear at first sight, and it is our duty to be perfectly frank in discussing it. First and foremost the continuance of our intercollegiate contests is at stake, and this alone makes it a matter of the utmost consequence to every student in the University. It is the merest folly to say that the Faculty could not abolish our intercollegiate games, or that they would not take so extreme an action. We might as well put our minds at rest on this subject immediately. The Faculty could most certainly abolish all forms...
...announce in another column, the president of the Senior Class has appointed a committee of forty prominent students to take charge of the celebrations. It is the plain duty of the student body to support this committee thoroughly in whatever it determines upon. Now that the situation has been fully explained and is thoroughly understood, every Harvard man should feel himself personally responsible for the success of our next celebration, and should be prompt to suppress the first exhibition of the wrong sort. This is especially necessary in view of the fact that there is sure to be present...
DEAR SIR:- We the undersigned believe that we voice the sentiment of the College student body in strongly condemning the use of fire-arms and explosives by the students, after an athletic victory, or at any other time, and we believe that it would be possible to control such objectionable demonstrations...