We wish to remind all Harvard men of their coming responsibility as hosts, and of the importance that every individual should do whatever he can to welcome our guests today and tomorrow.
One great object in holding the game on college grounds is to make it the occasion of more pleasant social intercourse than has been possible in the past at Springfield. Of course there is little which can be done for the Yale team itself, but its members will doubtless take the will for the deed, and the 'Varsity management may be relied upon to show them every attention which will not prove burdensome. With those, however, who come up from New Haven to see the game, and to visit their friends, the case is different. Harvard can hardly do enough toward returning in kind the cordial hospitality with which Harvard men were received last June at the baseball game in New Haven.
The Glee Club Concert tonight in Sanders is perhaps the most available and one of the most fitting forms of public entertainment which could have been devised. There will doubtless be a large number of graduates present in addition to the visitors who will already have reached Cambridge. The affair can hardly fail, therefore, to be thoroughly successful in point of numbers, and it is hoped to make out of it a very informal and pleasant evening.
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