Word: largerly
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...organization of this kind, looking to future, rather than immediate results, that most can be done to raise the plane of Harvard athletics. The resources of the University are large; much larger, in fact, than those of most of its rivals. There is no lack of muscle and brains with which to win. The trouble is that they are not made use of; that particular branches of activity are left to those who happen to be engaged in them at the moment. In short, there is not enough care taken to use all possible material, and when there...
...football squad went through the regular practice on Saturday afternoon before the Williams game. Three new men appeared: E. Postlethwaite, P. H. Sylvester and B. Z. Kasson. The candidates who are out now are working hard but it will be difficult to develop a winning team unless a much larger number of men come out immediately...
...have been due to the recent hard times and a consequent necessity for economy. In the clothing department for instance athletic goods have been sold by the piece, rather than by the complete outfit; in the book department, there has been more demand for small dictionaries than for the larger lexicons and reference books. Owing also to the hard times the society was able to make cheaper purchases than usual. The membership increased last year by from five to six per cent...
...good work this year the club must be supplied with funds with which to buy new boats, pay the coach, etc., and these funds must come from the dues of members. There is no reason why, with the large freshman class to draw from, the membership should not be larger than ever. When the privileges of the best boathouse in New England and instruction from a skilled coach can be had for dues which are insignificant when compared with those of other boat clubs, we expect to see everyone interested in rowing a member of the club...
...small amount of active interest taken in the plan, especially among the undergraduates, for whom the club was designed. It seems reasonable to suppose that if the pressing need for the club were more clearly demonstrated and more generally known, the subscriptions to the fund would be larger and more numerous. There is now a strong feeling among the students that an institution on the general plan of the English university clubs and Houston Hall at the University of Pennsylvania is really needed in Cambridge, and that the longer delay there is in starting it the greater will...