Word: caringly
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...meeting for all those interested in foot-ball will be held in Holden Chapel, Wednesday evening, Oct. 7, at 7.30. All who care for the preservation of the game are earnestly requested to be present, as it is of the utmost importance that something definite be decided at once. If the meeting is not well attended the management will know that the college does not care to keep up the game, and Harvard's entire resignation will be sent in to the Intercollegiate Convention and no further steps will be taken to revive the game. So all who care...
...keeping out of the yard objectionable persons who have entered in the evening in spite of the most strenuous efforts of those in charge. This year unusual precautions will be taken; the gate-keepers will be especially instructed and the tickets will be distributed with the greatest care. But all of this will avail little unless every student does his utmost to help the committee. In leaving the yard with a pass do not give it to any of the host of "objectionables" who throng outside the gates, eager for a chance to enter; again, be sure time none...
...could have won the series had they played the requisite number of games; they probably could not have won. But what we protest against, is the cool way in which Yale, '88, has broken written agreements, and refused to play the series out, because, for sooth, they did not care to take the time and trouble ! As for the News' claim that the freshman championship was acknowledged to be lost by Harvard, '88, quoting a letter to that effect, no one who had read the letter in question from an untiased standpoint could have helped seeing what the writer meant...
...greater advantage than the regular course. The curriculum which is now offered to the regular students is so extensive that a college course can be made to comprehend all that any special course could include. Why then should special study any longer be offered to those who do not care or have not sufficient energy to regularly fit themselves for the college course? But if necessity and policy both require that special students should find at Harvard that elysium which has no dawn and no setting, the government of the college in every sense pursues a wise course in requiring...
...himself as disagreeable, and everybody else as uncomfortable, as possible. Perhaps a good strong policeman, with a stronger "billy," would be as effective as anything else. But a policeman could not attain complete success, if he had not the co-operation of the students. Much more, then, is the care and attention of the students needed, when we have no policeman at all. It must be that those who have been wont to entice the muckers about their windows to race or wrestle for the proverbial "cent," forget in their present entertainment that they are but offering bait to fishes...