Word: supporter
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...nearly $300, and at least that amount is needed to send this year's team to Princeton for the triangular debate on May 5. There will be no charge for admission to the debate with Yale in Sanders Theatre on May 5, accordingly the team depends entirely on the support of the class...
...probably will be available as a basis on which collection may start. About $10,000 more must be raised from graduates and undergraduates, unless the H. A. A. or the College itself will contribute. Since no classes after 1917 have donated anything to the Gymnasium Fund, financial support may be expected from them. Now that the way has been opened to the construction of the pool, it is highly desirable that there should be no delay in financing the work and putting it into the hands of contractors. The CRIMSON takes especial pleasure in the action of the Corporation...
There will be a canvass of the University dormitories this evening and tomorrow evening to sell tickets for the debate with Princeton in Sanders Theatre on Friday evening at 8 o'clock. No other subscription will be taken for the debating team, this canvass being its sole support. Tickets, at 25, 50, or 75 cents, may also be purchased from the Cooperative Branch, Amee Brothers, or Matthews...
...appeared before the Student Council to point this out, for no one greatly cares what, if anything, is done by the Student Council; but everyone knows that if compulsory membership is introduced in a social club like the Union, we shall soon be taxed for the support of the Goodies' Aggregation, the Janitors' Junto, and the Harvard Square Business Thieves' League. Furthermore, now is a particularly unwise time for such a move. Tuitions are being raised and allowances lowered. Down with compulsion...
...sometimes an acid quality for which the players were in no way responsible, but which was almost entirely due to the absence of those most important of "fillers"--the horns. It has been proved too often to be a subject for debate that the fullest and most skillful orchestral support is none too good for an amateur performance. Economy practiced at the expense of the orchestra is not wisdom. Second: a lack of singers. This Pi Eta production is the first within the memory of the writer that has not presented some unusually spirited undergraduate singing. With a few exceptions...