Word: absent
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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While it was not, strictly speaking, against the Harvard team that Tufts made such remarkable progress, the game was nevertheless discouraging. It means that unless the absent regulars get back into shape and stay there, the University prospects in the big games are dark. With Mahan, Hardwick, Logan, and Pennock in the line-up, Tufts would have found the University a far different proposition, and with all of these men in condition the team can be ranked with the first in the country. What Saturday's contest proved was that Harvard cannot spare a single one of them...
...evening at 8 o'clock, at which the desirability of University participation and interest in political affairs will be advocated. The particular occasion for the meeting is the fact that registry for voting closes next Tuesday and it is felt that no Harvard man eligible to vote should be absent from the polls. Both as an educational factor, and in order to make their influence felt in local politics, it is considered necessary to do this. Professor Beale will preside at the meeting and Professor Holcombe and Professor Lewis J. Johnson will also speak. Men will be instructed with regard...
...Freshman was introduced to the University from the Faculty's point of view. Tonight the new men have a chance to become acquainted with the activities of the University as they are interpreted by fellow members in the upper classes. No member of 1918 can afford to be absent tonight...
...three men on the University crew who have been absent because of sickness returned to the boat yesterday. They were Captain Reynolds and W. T. Gardiner '14. C. E. Schall '16, the third man will report next Monday. Gardiner went in at 4 in place of Morgan and Captain Reynolds replaced Herrick at bow. Practice yesterday afternoon consisted of a long row up-stream. Following is the order of the first boat as it rowed yesterday: Stroke, Chanler; 7, Soucy; 6, Harwood; 5, J. W. Middendorf; 4, Gardiner; 3, Wilkinson; 2, Talcott; bow, Reynolds; cox., Sargent
...common interests of the members of the Federation of Territorial Clubs are too little apparent to make of it a self-operating institution. This year leaders seem conspicuously absent. According to the testimony of the fourteen members of the Federation who attended the meeting in the Union last evening to hear Dr. Fitch, the handbook, having no definite custodian, has strayed off the road into oblivion somewhere between here and last September. It was established with an ideal worthy of a better fate. If the Territorial Clubs are insistent upon dying, it will, we suppose, descend eventually to that already...