Word: attacked
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...scheduled game with Johns Hopkins will not be played, but the team and one substitute will leave Cambridge Sunday evening for South Bethlehem, where a game will be played Monday with Lehigh. The men who will go and their positions are as follows: Scott, captain, third attack; J. A. Leighton, second attack; B. T. Burley, first attack; W. Abbe, first defence; J. Staab, second defence; A. L. Curtis, third defence; H. A. Sand, goal: R. H. Starr, point; M. C. Woods, coverpoint; C. H. Horne, centre; F. L. Beecher, outside home; H. C. Ring, inside home. Substitute, G. V. Dearborn...
...generation ago. "When anything goes wrong in the management of the University," it says, "when there is any reform called for in our elective pamphlet, in the arrangements of the gymnasium or the library, or even in the condition of the walks in the yard, we students do not attack the matter in a business-like or compelling manner. A generation ago when the graduates wanted anything, they made themselves heard on the matter and advanced their demands in a body in the form of petitions, which were usually granted. The condition of our (mud) walks we declare abominable...
...method of judging is somewhat different from that used in the intercollegiate competition, and consists of a bout for an aggregate of five touches to which the judges may add three points or any portion thereof for excellence in attack, defence, or general good form...
...compared with this? Would England extend any "political system" to South america which could in any sense endanger "our peace and happiness?" When the last French Empire undertook to establish an empire in Mexico, while our Southern states were in rebellion, we were justified in resisting so obvious an attack on the very existence of our government. We must not use our sharpest tools on every petty piece of work, or they will be dulled when we have real need of them...
...violent attack on Mr. Roosevelt, which Mr. Warner made in the columns of your paper this morning, is, in the opinion of some members of the University, uncalled for under the circumstances...