Word: supported
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...that is saying a great deal, for it has been of unusually high standard throughout. One of the best ways of showing the gratitude which is due Mr. Whiting for his efforts is to make this, the farewell performance, an enthusiastic one. Thanks are also due the alumni, whose support has made these concerts possible. Believing that no man should leave Harvard without at least having had the opportunity of hearing the world's greatest musical literature, the alumni have each year for several years past, contributed from one to two thousand dollars toward these recitals, and they rightly expect...
...class of 1910, young but enthusiastic, to take concerted action to further the movement for a new gymnasium started by the undergraduates this year through the Forum and Student Council. The members of the class have shown their interest in the institution and the students by pledging their best support, and by recommending to President Lowell that he appoint a committee to carry this matter through. No one realizes better than President Lowell that the demand for the new gymnasium is tremendously strong, and furthermore, no one knows better than he how much Harvard men have been called...
...reasoning. These victories show that debating at Harvard is not declining because it is more in the hands of the undergraduates, for every member of the team against Yale is a student in the College. With the assurance that debating on an undergraduate plane is worthy of the best support because capable of good accomplishment, this excellent form of intellectual activity should continue to increase in popularity...
...realized that present facilities for indoor teams are wholly inadequate and that the present gymnasium is the weakest part of the University equipment. Consequently the class of 1910 pledges its moral and financial support to this cause and agrees to further it in every possible...
...undeniable that the undergraduate body desires a merger of the Advocate and Monthly as so to eliminate the weaknesses and defects of this present struggle for survival and to breathe into a combination of effort a new lease of life. If these papers look to support from the public whom they serve, they should take heed of this general desire and combine their efforts to establish a literary magazine that shall be worthy of Harvard. For several years, the plan for union has been before the two boards and the undergraduate body, and it has failed of realization because...