Word: knowingly
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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...about 13 weeks. The competition will end on or about January 10. In pursuance of the practice of the past two years, the fall competition will not be open to Freshmen, for it is felt that they had better have more than two weeks in which to learn to know the University before undertaking such absorbing work. The second competition, beginning in February, will be open...
Captain Foster, the first speaker, emphasized the importance of the fall work. We always know the ability of the veterans, but what is needed to win meets in second string men as well as stars. In the fall, more chance is given for individual coaching, and thereby new material is developed. This applies especially to the Freshmen, for they make the winning University teams of the future. Shrubb will have charge of the cross-country men. All distance men should report to him daily, for such work develops them. Since Freshmen will not be eligible for the University team...
...mere summaries, such as we should expect to find under the departmental notes. "From a Graduates' Window" comments with not wholly fortunate jocosity on the growing cosmopolitanism of Harvard. Mr. Holman's account of "Living Harvards and their family records" is sufficiently entertaining; and it is interesting to know that the name is still borne by relatives, though not descendants, of John Harvard himself. The author of the description of the Lampoon building fairly swells with pride as he enumerates the treasures concealed within its walls. His essay reads like the catalogue of an art museum, and is about equally...
...club is to give a lecture of interest, other clubs will be notified by the secretary. The council will represent any member before an outside organization, and also if any organization outside the University desires to get into communication with the society representing a certain interest, and does not know the proper club, the council will bring the two together. Third, if a question of general significance to the University arises, the council will call together all component clubs, or a number of them, to discuss such an issue in common, thus helping to form and guide undergraduate opinion...
...When we know how exhaustively undergraduates discuss the questions of the day, decide the fate of nations, and solve the problems of the universe, it seems strange to us that they should so coyly decline from putting their thoughts on paper, or, at all events, in print. This becoming reticence cheats the College papers, for they receive little or no support from men who are not editors. Surely the papers miss their mark if they do not give some stimulus to thought and offer a medium for undergraduate expression. The columns of all the papers are gaping open...