Word: wholed
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...from Wednesday to the following Monday was signed by 664 students. The faculty, however, instead of making the recess longer than usual, have shortened it to one day. Their meaning probably is that, while the students complained because the journey to and from home consumed in most cases the whole time granted, it ought not to be a great hardship to spend the day in Cambridge. [Harvard Correspondent of N. Y. Post...
...catalogue which has just been issued shows the whole number of the graduates of the college to be 2691. The summary of the students now in college is: Graduate students, 2; seniors, 49; juniors, 56; sophomores, 75; freshmen, 69; total...
...recent action in the matter the general press and the public have begun to take an active part in its discussion. Dr. Crosby's utterances on this and other phases of college life have recently been stirring up a lively debate on the subject. No statement of the whole question, we think, can be better than that given in the last Nation, a statement that is worthy of the most careful consideration and discussion by all college men who are interested in athletics as a constituent part of a symmetrical college training. The writer says : "The general public...
...friction among the magazines and papers enlisted in the association from the first, but by the stimulus to all others implied in the fact that subsequent admission to its ranks will depend only upon literary merit. Upon this latter point, to our thinking, the success or failure of the whole thing depends. Admission must never be allowed to degenerate into a matter of favoritism between individuals or colleges. Secondly, the promotion of good fellowship and an amiable emulation between the different colleges, and, thirdly, the inauguration of a system whereby each college shall be made responsible for the authenticity...
...game, on the whole, was the roughest and most unsatisfactory seen at Harvard this year. The rules were systematically broken by Yale all through the game. Edmands was jumped upon nearly every time he went to catch the ball, and this practice was the cause of most of the hissing; but Harvard must confess that they played a weaker game than with Princeton last week...