Word: successes
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...interested in the Boston concert of the glee and banjo clubs for the benefit of the university crew. It should be remembered that this concert cannot be advertised, and that its success will in large measure depend upon the efforts of any of us who can let our friends know about it and do whatever else we can to arouse an interest in it. It is to be hoped that some time the Boston concert may become a regular fixture, expected by Boston friends of the college. When it does it will not need advertising...
...glee, banjo and mandolin clubs will give a concert in Music Hall, Boston, next Tuesday evening, April 14, for the benefit of the university crew. It will be remembered that the Boston concert last year was not a financial success; this was owing to the fact that these concerts cannot be advertised. This year the crew management is making a determined effort to insure financial success to the concert, and the effort should meet with a proper response from the students...
...board has twice been lowered. Moreover, during this time, the membership has increased ten per cent. The announcement is now made that a dividend of five per cent. has been declared, to be deducted from the term bills. Such material evidences of prosperity form another proof of the success of co-operative student movements at Harvard. We already have this scheme of cooperation more highly developed at Harvard than at any other college; but there is still much room for its growth. We feel sare that the further development of the system in the next few years will...
...comes. We are loath to believe this. Though our meetings cannot be run on the scale of some of the larger athletic club meetings-the B. A. A., for instance-yet they can be brought up very greatly by making all the events open to outsiders. A successful trial at this was made in one event on Saturday. If necessary, then, cut down our winter meeting to one; but in that one make the events open and try to bring the meetings up to the level of outside contests. Such a course is the only sure one to bring back...
...would seem, on first thought, that such a decided falling off in interest would surely counteract our success in track and field athletics. The facts, however, do not warrant such an assumption. Never has our success been greater than in the past year or two, and our prospects for the future seem equally bright. The natural suggestion, then, might be that the cause which has killed the interest in our meetings has also kept up the general success in the athletics. It seems to us that, as a matter of fact, such is the case; and that this cause...