Word: sharee
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...which have appeared daily in the CRIMSON for past weeks are to be taken as criterions of conscientious work, the audience should be treated to something startling in its originality and of surpassing excellence in its production. The college will also expect the Freshman Glee Club to do its share in driving away dull care during the long spring and summer evenings, by entertaining the inmates of the dormitories in the yard with songs of mirth and jollity...
...dispute in favor of the affirmative. He said the respective merits of Harvard and Yale in field and track athletics were materially obscured by the admission of smaller colleges in the league. The financial aspect of the case was of great importance and could not be ignored. Harvard's share of the gate receipts in New York would be minute compared with the returns if the games were played alternately at Cambridge and New Haven. Under this system more men would be drawn into the contests; there would be better grounds for the sports; more enthusiasm would be aroused...
...college who have played cricket in preparatory schools or elsewhere, and we urge such men to come forward and try for positions on the team. The game with the University of Pennsylvania will give a boon to the sport, and we hope that the college will do its share towards helping the team to achieve as many victories this year as it did last spring...
...that they are not mean, nor stingy, nor, worst of all, indifferent; to show to Yale and other colleges that if money is needed by Harvard organizations money will be forthcoming, even if it does take a little self-sacrifice and denial. Remember this, Harvard men, and do your share towards helping your crew to "show four miles of river to the crack New Haven crew" next June. And, as we have said before, do not wait to be called upon personally, but send or give your subscriptions in at once to the manager of the crew...
...earnestness and deep sincerity which marked the speech of Mr. Pfeiffer, particularly in that portion which treated the question of voluntary prayers and the attitude of college men toward religious services. Mr. Pfeiffer gave the class of '89 plainly to understand that, while athletics may call for a large share of the attention of the students of Harvard, there is another interest, namely, the religious, that cannot be neglected. The remarks of the speaker made a profound impression upon those who heard them, and it must be regretted that every man in college was not within reach of the speaker...