Word: tomorrows
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Yogi would say, it’s deja-vu all over again. For the second successive year the Harvard and Penn football teams are both 5-0 and are preparing to battle tomorrow for the Ivy League crown and the chance of an unbeaten Ivy season. As the Crimson’s marquee team awaits its biggest sporting challenge of the year (and one to be featured on ESPN’s GameDay, no less), it is a fitting time to think about the central role athletics should play at Harvard and why those who denigrate athletes are sorely misguided...
Harvard, it is repeated ad nauseam, is filled with the leaders of tomorrow. Yet it is rarely discussed that one can learn far more about leadership from participating in serious team sports than from ferreting around in the stacks of Widener Library. In support of the crucial role athletics has to play in undergraduate life, Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis ’68 cited the example of an alumnus he had just met at an event in New York. “[He was a] varsity soccer player, and now heads a division of 600 people...
...past and present as the home of Harvard athletics that we should look for inspiration. Harvard will always have “the brightest;” it is time to focus on “the best.” And whatever the result in Philadelphia tomorrow, our athletes have already shown themselves to fall into the latter category...
...spectator environment, maybe other students will come out more than once a year to join in the excitement and consequently bring the Harvard community closer together. For those who want to try, here’s a simple start: if you can’t make it to Philadelphia tomorrow, find a TV with cable, gather all your friends and watch your fair Harvard hit the national scene...
...Club, which typically launches buses to away games on Saturday mornings, decided on an overnight trip this week so fans can arrive in time for the start of the pre-game show at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow...