Word: preventive
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...moral sense, few seemed to hesitate to hand their money to friends near the box-office who apparently stood a better chance of getting tickets. So far as the effect on those behind goes, the result is the same in either case. It is obviously unfair, and to prevent the recurrence of such a practice I suuggest that the sales of "rush" seats at the coming concerts be managed in Cambridge as they are in Boston, and that no person be allowed to buy more than one of the twenty-five cent tickets. If some such rule is not adopted...
...same time the ever present problem of the Union. While it is to be hoped that the Forum have not permanently perished under the care of the Speakers' Club, the dispersion of the limited energy of the nature which the Forum had anticipated attracting to itself was sufficient to prevent the holding of a single meeting last year. The loss would perhaps not have been so great if a single one of the newer organizations had shown sufficient promise to replace the Forum. But with the Economics Society, the Political Science Club, the Socialist club, the Speakers' Club, and other...
...first place the idea exists among undergraduates that secret practice means literally practice conducted in absolute secrecy, with the intention of preventing any new plays from being carried away by the spectators and reaching the ears of our adversaries. This is further strengthened by the strange truth that on each Saturday the undergraduate sees but little change in the team's style of playing, with but few new or startling plays in its method of attack. Secret practice is not conducted primarily to keep secret the team's development. It claims a far more worthy aim; that of permitting...
Heretofore the clubs were free to elect at the beginning of the Sophomore year and there was therefore no agreement to prevent canvassing in the Freshman year. The postponement of the elections protects the Freshman year completely and prevents the Freshmen from attaching undue importance on immediately becoming involved in the club system. Clubs at Harvard are purely social and in view of this the CRIMSON heartily agrees with the sentiment expressed in the following editorial which appears in the Alumni Bulletin...
Even if technicalities prevent the appearance of the University second crew in the English Henley this summer, the desire of the crew authorities to enter and the general interest taken in the proposed international regatta speak well for the place of rowing in the University. The branching out of rowing as a sport, as evidenced by the sending of the second crew to the American Henley, and now the entrance of the same crew in the most important English regatta, is sure to meet with the approval of the University in general...