Word: successfully
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...class lacrosse team, to be supported by the class, and to furnish material for the 'Varsity team? At present lacrosse is on a doubtful footing in some respects. It should be put on the same footing as foot-ball and base-ball for it to become a permanent success. That is, the freshmen should have a lacrosse team just as they have their crew, their base-ball nine and foot-ball team. The growing interest in lacrosse throughout the country, and especially in the colleges and preparatory schools shows that the game is bound to take a place among college...
Smith, the Yale student who was recently arrested and fined for swindling, is the player who in Harvard's game with Yale last spring made the remarkable fielding catch of Coolidge's long fly, and thus contributed so largely to Yale's success in the game...
...followed, and the articles on hand have been distributed without reference to person. In this manner some have received undue preference, and others are clamorous against the unbusiness-like method which has been followed. So long as we rank among the former we are well enough pleased with the success and usefulness of the association, but after missing several days' preparation for lectures through careless management on the part of the society's agents, we feel much less disposed to praise it ungrudgingly. If such success is hoped for in the future as has marked the business transacted during...
...Harvard's athletes will be at a great disadvantage at the "intercollegiate athletics games," the committee yet deem it their duty to obtain such a man as a measure which will raise the standard of athletics in the college and in the end prove most advantageous to the success of Harvard athletes. Until such a man is appointed, Dr. Sargent is to take care that no man injures himself in any way by exercise. Under his charge, too, men will be hired to act as "rubbers down," and a scale of prices for "rubbing down" will be drawn...
...opposed to it; but it should be the aim of others to convert such opponents to their own faith. At Harvard especially, where so great an interest is taken in all historical and economic studies, the formation of such an association would seem especially advisable and its prospects for success particularly bright. Participation in practical politics is certainly the duty of all educated men, and in this matter especially their efforts might be most appropriately put forth...