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...weak at times, but not to any great extent. It is possible that within a few days the individual coaching, which occasions so much delay and in so doing seriously lessens the snap and life of the game, will be discontinued and the men driven to play just the sort of a game that they would against a regular opponent. It is hoped in this way to develop team play and continuous sharp, aggressive work...
...plan for raising an endowment fund of a quarter of a million dollars, with the hope that when it should be offered to the Corporation of Harvard College a union of some sort would be effected, has not yet had a definite result, the contributions so far falling short of the sum contemplated...
...teams it is pretty safe to say that the smart of the recent goal by Pennsylvania will only serve to intensify the determination of the Yale players to do or die at Springfield. It has always been the case that Yale has played better under a spur of this sort and this has been, perhaps more prominently than anything else, the distinguishing feature between Harvard and Yale teams. Admitting that in the end the fact of Pennsylvania's goal will be a source of profit to Yale, what effect will it have on Harvard? The team has seen Yale...
...exhibition of lantern slides to be held by the Camera Club in Boylston Hall tomorrow night. The slides which will be exhibited are almost entirely from views of Harvard taken for the World's Fair, with a few additional negatives made this fall. The exhibition will be a sort of public rehearsal, for the aim of the club in giving it is primarily to satisfy the members whether or not the slides are good enough to pass muster at the International Lantern Slide Exchange, to membership in which the club hopes to be admitted. If the club is admitted...
...always exciting, either from the clever work of the teams or from intense feeling on the part of the spectators. This enthusiasm has run riot at some of the games to the extent of filling up the playing space with a surging mass of class partisans. Obviously this sort of conduct, though it may be nothing but heedlessness, interferes with a just and fair settlement of class supremacy in football. If the spectators crowd upon the field they are sure, before the game is over, to spoil the play. At the class baseball games, where certainly the enthusiasm is just...