Word: contesters
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...interclass football series will begin on next Tuesday with games between the Seniors and Juniors, and the Sophomores and Freshmen. The games will be on the Freshman Field. Should the Freshmen win their game, the final contest in the series will take place on the Thursday following, but if the Sophomores win, it will be played on Friday. The schedule is thus made provisional because the Freshmen play Pennsylvania on Saturday...
...undergraduate contest will be open to all men, including Freshmen, who are in regular standing in Harvard College or the Lawrence Scientific School. The essays may be on any subject whatever, provided it is approved by the chairman of the Bowdoin Prize Committee. Theses forming part of the regular work of courses may be offered with the consent of the instructors concerned, or, subject to such consent, may be re-written for the prize competition. The graduate competition will be open to all holders of academic degrees, who have been in the Graduate School for a full year within...
...must be handed in before October 21. The two men in each section winning the largest number of games will be qualified to enter for the final round. No prizes will be offered this year, as the object of the tournament is to pick a team for the intercollegiate contest which will take] place in New York this fall...
...other three main contributions, H. W. Foote '97, discusses "The Significance of the International Meet," and shows, in a truly sportsmanlike fashion, just what was meant and brought about by the contest between the Harvard-Yale athletes and those of Oxford and Cambridge. "The Madness of Robert Martin," by R. C. Bolling '00, is hardly one of the writer's best stories. The phrases are now and then a little too robust, sometimes too reminiscent of the interminable Kipling; and though one can understand Martin's rebellion against society, his reconciliation seems rather abrupt, rather arbitrary. Still, the story runs...
...throw too much work upon the muscles, and especially upon the heart, until they are strengthened by preliminary work; secondly, to watch the nutrition carefully; and thirdly, to avoid nervous fatigue by providing a certain variety of exercise, and by not confining the attention too closely to the approaching contest. Professor Hart continues his usual readable and suggestive comments on the University under the heading of "Advancing Responsibilities," and the Student Life is written this year by F. E. Boswell '00. Athletics, news from classes, departmental reports, etc., complete the number...