Complaint is sometimes made of the small number of men who usually attend any ordinary class meeting, and the usual moral of Harvard indifference is in most cases drawn from this circumstance. It has been suggested that the late practice indulged in by some of the classes of calling meetings merely for the purpose of collecting money and paying off debts is the more important cause of poor attendance at these meetings. Of course this should not have any weight in deterring men from meetings, but, it is claimed, unhappily it does have weight. Perhaps a little more care and adroitness on the part of those whose unhappy duty it is to canvass for subscriptions could devise a better and less dangerous way of accomplishing their ends!
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Notices.Recommended Articles
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No HeadlineThe following is the official announcement of the approaching spring meetings of the Harvard Athletic Association: Monday, May 15, at
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No HeadlineEditors Daily Crimson: Although it is somewhat premature to bring matters connected with the winter meetings of the H. A.
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No HeadlineWE entirely approve of the action now pending in the Natural History Society, of reducing its time of meeting from
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No HeadlineAT a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Athletic Association on Monday evening, the dates of the winter meetings
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CORRESPONDENCE.TO THE EDITORS OF THE CRIMSON : - So much has been said, and on the whole so ill said,
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No HeadlineNow that the three regular meetings of the Athletic Association have been so successfully completed, while only the encore or