Word: tops
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...spirit with which the college has looked upon the Mott Haven team this year has unfortunately lacked much that spontaneous gratitude which the college owes to the team. There seems to have been a general impression that Harvard was going to come out on top in track athletics simply because it did so well last year. The fact seems to have been lost sight of that while Harvard has lost some of her best men since last year, the standard of track athletics in the other colleges has been distinctly increasing. There are in the team very...
...interesting seen thus far in the class series. The excitement was very great in the last three innings, during which it was anybody's game and the score see-sawed, first in favor of the juniors, then changing at most unexpected moments until the seniors again rose to the top...
...freshmen beat the Tech. '94 team, in a well played and interesting game on Jarvis, yesterday afternoon. Only about five freshmen came out to see the game, and they spent most of their time watching the 'varsity game from the top of the seats. In this, as in almost every other freshman game this year, the class has given its nine absolutely no support. Nothing can be more discouraging or disastrous to a class team., than such utter lack of interest. What will help the nine more than any subscriptions is a good crowd of 200 men watching the game...
There has been placed on top of the card catalogue in the library, an index to the subject catalogue. This is bound to prove a great help to men in looking up subjects. Anyone wishing to look up the sublect of "Rivers" for example, has but to turn to "Rivers" in this index, read the number opposite (for instance 1506.2) and find the drawer in the card catalogue of subjects which contains this number (say the drawer numbered 1500.1 - 160). In this way a great deal of time spent in finding information will be saved...
...remedies into their own hands, and open some windows. A class will sit through a recitation with every window tight shut, will grow drowsier every minute the air grows worse, and yet no one will have the common sense to open two windows a few inches at the top, and set some good air circulating. Much has been said, and wisely too, about the sanitary necessity of pure air. There is another side of the question which may Perhaps appeal more directly to the men themselves. Close air makes a man sleepy. His brain becomes sluggish, and though...