Word: fittingly
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...total of 780 yards per man. Van Brunt started the race for Harvard and followed closely behind Kirjassoff of Yale until the sixth lap, when his strength gave out and he fell fifty yards from the finish. It was evident early in the race that he was not in fit condition for so long a distance and that a substitute should have run in his stead. He showed great pluck, however, and after falling managed to totter to the finish, where he was relieved by Haskell. Haskell started over half a lap behind Spitzer and finished with a slightly wider...
...advisory coaches. The members of the committee are expected to be present on the field as often as possible, and at least twice in each week. They will have the right to enforce upon the head coach a hearing of any criticism or advice which they may see fit to offer; and they are to be present at coaches meetings, at the option of the head coach. Any vacancy in the committee is to be filled by vote of the surviving members...
...show other men that they too have a call. That great failure in leadership, Napoleon Bonaparte, had the fault that he saw only his own star of destiny, and there came a time when other men failed to see that star. Men of vocation, to use their power must fit in with other men of vocation. The alliance of Wash- ington and Hamilton: of Lincoln with the members of his cabinet-all men with a strong sense of duty-show that this working together is possible and, for success, is imperative. The true leader must be in correspondence with...
...congratulated on securing Mr. Pieper to coach the nine for another season. It is always a pleasure to have a successful coach who is also a Harvard graduate, and Mr. Pieper's three years with Freshman teams and one year with the University nine make him eminently fit to lead another team to victory. His qualifications rest not only upon his success of last season against Yale, but also upon the spirit which he infused into the team, and the idea which he worked on-that the baseball season is not a perpetual round of drudgery, but an opportunity...
...cheering this evening in the Square will afford the University its first real opportunity of showing its confidence and interest in the football team. The time of departure should fit in between engagements, so that no one will have the conflicting attraction of a lecture or other important appointment as an excuse for absence. The team is leaving for its first crucial test of the season, and since distance will prevent most undergraduates from attending the game, the least the University can do is to give the team a send-off which will last until the game is played...