Word: keeping
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While we are in hearty sympathy with the college authorities in their efforts to keep the taint of professionalism from our college athletics, we cannot forbear again calling attention to the ridiculous extreme to which their fear of this professionalism has carried them. It is a well known fact that our base-ball nine made a failure of its last season, although it started out with the brightest prospects, simply from the lack of professional training. Although other colleges had the advantage of a professional player in training their pitchers and their batsmen, we were compelled to play through...
There is hardly a student in college-certainly not one rooming outside the yard, who would not be benefited by a new dormitory. The comfort of men who never have boarded, and never will board, at Memorial, depends on the success of the Dining Association to keep prices down and prevent the boarding places from being crowded ; and in the same way, the competition that another good dormitory would exert would lower the exorbitant rent that rooms in any desirable locality now command. We must have another soon, and it is certainly better for the college to get the income...
...Saunders, E. H. Hatch, G. W. Brown, G. N. Jones, Clapp, Harrington, Drown, Goodspeed, A. Perkins, Lounsbury, Pickop, Atwood, E. A. Hibbard, Darling, Trail, Cogan, L. R. Gifford, T. J. Coolidge, Bates, Nolen, Frost, Morss, Ellis, Noble, Berryman, Simonds, C. B. Davis, Phippen, Moore. Disquisitions-Lancaster. Williams, W. I. Keep, Noonan, Nichols, Riley, Chapman, G. H. Perkins, J. Lowman, Dana, Goepp, H. E. Barnes, Glover, O. F. Hibbard, Abbott, Pratt, Sexton, Peirson...
...under consideration a plan of putting up order boxes in various buildings about the college. This plan if adopted, will add very much to the convenience of the society and will necessitate but a small outlay on the part of the society. We hope that its membership will keep on increasing as the advantage to be derived from membership naturally becomes greater in proportion to the increase in membership...
...chance in a handicap, while in a limit race he might really be too poor to have any chance at all. Finally handicaps are a great means of bringing out new men and improving old. New men are often encouraged by beating a scratch man, go in again and keep at it until they themselves become scratch men, while the old men have to do their best to win, and hence are often wonderfully improved. But a word to scratch men. Don't feel disappointed if you are beaten. As an old English athlete...