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...present, there is plenty of work for the committee, both in this direction and keeping up the high standard of the former. Visiting teams who have played against other colleges this fall speak very favorably of the gentlemanly game of Harvard, an immediate effect we think, of the restrictions of the committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/26/1886 | See Source »

EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - I quite agree with the sentiments of the '90 man as expressed in yesterday's CRIMSON, though I think his way of wording his remarks is a little obscure. Harvard has made great strides in the last few years, and I am proud to be in it. There are however, some inequalities that still need to be remedied: I do not think the upperclassmen are quite kind enough in inviting freshmen to their rooms or taking freshmen into their society. It would make us feel better if a helping hand were stretched to us and we were...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/23/1886 | See Source »

Considerable dissatisfaction is felt among the foot-ball enthusiasts at New Haven at the manner in which they think Yale was treated at the recent inter-collegiate foot-ball convention in New York. The feeling here is that Princeton, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania joined forces and advanced a proposition to the effect that Yale should play Harvard at Cambridge and Princeton at Princeton. They argued that as Harvard had a new and inexperienced team, it was no more than fair that Yale should give them the benefit of playing on their own grounds, and that as Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Note and Comment. | 10/19/1886 | See Source »

...frozen demeanor among the upperclassmen toward each other as well as toward the freshmen. Freshmen not being accustomed to such strange ways of evincing affectionate feeling, are troubled by this coldness. We simply give them a word of comfort and warning. They must not be discouraged. The upperclassmen really think a great deal of them, and would show it if they dared. But they are afraid to oppose the college feeling. They have to be cold to their nearest friends even, or else the well-known spirit of indifference, which has held sway so long, will be compelled to seek...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/15/1886 | See Source »

...pleasing delivery; she uses one style of voice for everything, defies her 'haughty rival' in the same tone that she uses to bid her lover good-bye, and bids her lover good-bye in the same tone in which she tells him of her love. Miss Mitchell seems to think that piquancy is given to her conversation by a slight rising inflection at the end of every sentence, but such a thing becomes only exasperating when repeated a number of times. There is in the cast a character by the name of Ishmael Ackbar, a Spanish Gypsy. For a Spaniard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dramatic Notes. | 10/13/1886 | See Source »