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...Flaherty '11, right end, prepared at Bridgewater Normal School, where he played halfback. Last year he played quarterback on the University team. He is 22 years old, 6 feet tall, and weighs 183 pounds...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard-Dartmouth Statistics | 11/12/1910 | See Source »

...effectively, let there be an executive committee of ten men or less, which shall have power to act for the Council except in cases of unusual importance. Such an arrangement would obviate the greatest faults of the old organization. As soon as the undergraduate mind is restored to its normal condition by the end of the football season, the re-animation and re-juvenation of the present defunct Student Council must be undertaken and carried through...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STUDENT COUNCIL. | 11/12/1910 | See Source »

...Under normal conditions the competition will close about February 1. The competition is open to all members of the Sophomore class. Any men who have had experience in advertising or subscription work are especially urged to report in the CRIMSON Office this evening at 7 o'clock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Business Competition to Begin at 7 o'clock | 10/3/1910 | See Source »

...selections by the Glee Club, S. B. Steele '11 spoke of the many opportunities offered by the undergraduate interests outside of college work. Dr. A. P. Fitch '00, representing the religious life of the University, said that nowhere was it so easy for a boy to be a normal youth as in a school of learning. If a man at Harvard gets to a point where he brings discredit upon himself, it is so much the worse, because there is little excuse. Following this, Dr. Fitch spoke about the great advantages of services in Appleton Chapel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOOD TALKS TO FRESHMEN | 10/1/1910 | See Source »

...other hand, when applied to sports within the College this rule seems ineffective and harmful, for it affords no real stimulus and deprives men of legitimate and normal exercise. In the first place no man will exert himself over-much in order to be eligible for a tennis tournament or to play on the "Chuck-a-Pucks," and in the second place, these scrub sports do not require any more time or energy than the normal youth should devote to h is daily exercise. In discouraging this the arrangement is distinctly harmful. Here we might well profit by the example...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROBATION AND ATHLETICS. | 5/23/1910 | See Source »

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