Word: hidden
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...custom done away with as their authorities are to preserve this link with the past. We find the custom pleasing for its quaintness, and convenient because it is not required, but we should not forget its significance. History may repeat itself and a canary necktie may yet be hidden by a prescribed muffler...
...Hidden away in the formal official announcement of the Christmas vacation that appears to be but the repetition of similar announcements of years past, there is a real and significant change of policy. Until this year students who live in the far South and West have been allowed to leave Cambridge a day or two before the vacation began so that they might reach their homes at approximately the same time as those who live near Cambridge, but no similar arrangement was made at the other end of the holiday. Some men have had to leave home on New Year...
...antiquated, the trophies are neither arranged satisfactorily not kept up to date. The last football team picture which hangs there is of the 1903 team; and the last baseball picture is that of 1904. There are a great many dusty crew trophies in the Newell Boat House, and hidden away in a cobwebby corner of the present Gymnasium are more relics of past victories. The prows of old shells are in the Union Reading Room, and there are more pictures and trophies in the Locker Building...
...arrange for the collection of all the trophies from various parts of Cambridge, a thorough dusting off, and a better arrangement. A very fitting place for a Trophy Room would be in the new Varsity Club, except that there would be danger of the relics of victory being hidden from the eyes of the interested public--that is, the fathers and mothers and aunts and uncles and friends of undergraduates and from most of the undergraduates themselves. We suggest that the Varsity Club provide a Trophy Room which non-members of the club might enter; if the entrance to such...
...lack of interest of the men in charge but to the lack of funds in their control. It is a great pity to allow banners and other destructible relics to be ruined because there is not enough money to preserve them, and to allow cups to be hidden away out of sight because there are no cases to put them in. Certainly this is a cause which deserves recognition from the class treasurers, and the example of 1908 should be followed by the graduating classes of the future. But it would seem more appropriate if the Athletic Association would...