Word: use
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...quarterback; L. B. Harding '08, end; H. F. Miller sS., end; M. D. Robinson '09, guard. Under the direction of Coach Motley the ends practiced quick starting and running down under punts, while Coach Reid, assisted by Coach Brown, gave the first and second elevens practice in the use of the forward pass with varying success. Both teams were given a short drill in blocking through; and Foster and Burr made several good punts apiece from the same scrimmage formation...
...cultivated under anonymity. In his discussion of "Swinburne's Relation to the Poetry of the Immediate Past and Future" J. H. Wheelock '08 is not quite articulate and not always grammatical. He is touched with some of the verbal diseases that afflict the poet of his admiration--the excessive use of abstract terms, and the reluctance to tell us precisely and specifically what he is talking about. The wistful melody of the same contributor's verses have somewhat of this same defect of vagueness. H. Hagedorn '07 in his perilous attempt in an "Ode to Nature" is more successful both...
Clubs and societies of the University may use the Union rooms for organization until October 15. On and after that date 80 per cent. Union members shall be required...
...four pieces has been provided during the luncheon and dinner hours. Smoking has been permitted throughout the three rooms in the library, rather than in the North room only; and an arrangement has been made by which members are allowed to take books from the library, for temporary use in any part of the building. The constitution now in operation was adopted last March. It is a working, feasible constitution, framed on actual experience. It has centralized the management of the Union, besides doing away with technicalities which made the running of the Union, besides doing away with technicalities which...
...most striking and encouraging thing about the Union in the past year has been its large and inclusive membership (it has never had so many members); and the use which this membership has made of this splendid institution. The Union is no longer regarded simply as a convenient place in which to hold meetings or lectures. It is a place to "drop around to" for a meal, to read and study, to get telegraphic in which Harvard teams are competing, or to meet one's friends. The great and surprisingly varied possibilities of the Union are being realized more...