Word: sureness
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Among the numerous non-social clubs in Cambridge, there has been in the past a decided need for some organization which can bring co-ordination into their various activities, and prevent the misunderstandings which are sure to arise between societies of similar interests. To accomplish this the Council of Federated Clubs has been established, and with foresighted and impartial administration it can be effective and useful in undergraduate affairs...
Gardner will run in the 100 again as he did in the Yale meet, and should place with a third or possibly second. Thayer or Tyler may come in for a fourth. Foster will probably not run in this event; at any rate he is not sure enough of competing to give him a point on paper. If Foster is in shape for the 220 he can win it, but it is very improbable, because of the fact that since the Yale meet he has had nothing but very light work. Watson or Thayer may get a point in this...
...high hurdles Dwight of Princeton and Chisholm of Yale are the best men. Lewis or Long of the University team may place. In the low hurdles Gardner is counted upon for first place, with Chisholm and Dwight sure of places. Here again Lewis or Long may place...
...David Carb and recently acted by the Harvard Dramatic Club. It deals with the South at the hour of Lee's surrender, and its meaning is large and high. Mr. Lippmann interprets Mr. Granville Barker with vigorous admiration. Mr. Spring tells a tragic story with a touch not always sure but with evidence of power. Mr. Seligmann contributes a light ghost story--humorous in sports--the point of which I have striven to feel or to perceive. The editorial articles are a graceful recognition of the Monthly and a hearty tribute to President Lowell...
...present number of the Advocate has, first of all, the great and none too common merit of being worth reading. Whether it is worth preserving I am not so sure; but the articles on matters of immediate interest to Harvard men, of which the number is almost wholly made up, are certainly just now very much worth while. They express and stimulate ideas, and this statement is high praise. Dean Castle's answer to Mr. Lippmann's objections to the Freshman dormitory scheme is exactly what we have long been hoping for: a public defence, from a man intimately acquainted...