Word: following
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...think how few are the opportunities for social meetings of the classes while in college, we feel sure that every man should consider it his duty as well as pleasure to attend a class dinner. Let all therefore put their names down who can, and thus encourage others to follow their example...
...next day's base-ball game? The Hemenway system, as practiced at Harvard, is being successfully introduced in many of the colleges of the United States. Wellesley, John Hopkins University, and many other institutions are to give it a trial, and we are in hopes good results will follow. The Hemenway system is simple and easy to follow, the only requirements being that each student's physical condition is examined and he is then instructed what method of training to adopt, for, unfortunately, all are not born with equally strong and perfect bodies, and each must pursue a course that...
...remarks at the Harvard Club dinner, at Delmonicos' last Thursday, Mr. C. M. Depew, president of the Yale Club, said: "In many things Yale is content to follow and learn of Harvard. This willingness extended even to New London;" and before the laughter had died away the speaker continued, "And last fall and the fall before and I don't know how many more falls, Yale also followed Harvard across the foot-ball field up town...
...only attempt in that direction was last year, and it seems a shame that such an enjoyable occasion as a class dinner should come but once during our college course. It is true '84 tried to repeat their dinner in the junior year and failed, but it does not follow that '85 would be equally unsuccessful. Classes here before, I believe, have had successful junior dinners and '85 would do well to follow their example. If a class meeting were to be held for the purpose of finding how the sentiment of the class stood in regard to this project...
EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-The air is filled with denunciations of our faculty. Indignation meetings have been proposed, and dynamite will soon be resorted to. If, in spite of these warnings, the faculty will persist in their ruinous career, a calamity must inevitably follow. But let us consider the matter in a slightly less nihilistic way. What justification have the faculty for their actions? In a conference held in New York, a number of professors, representing all the Eastern colleges of any importance, decided that the professional spirit had entered to a too great extent into almost all our college athletics...