Word: availible
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...yearlings' territory the entire game and though they carried it down to the goal time and again, they were consistently stopped by Captain S. E. Gray at left fullback. A. L. Phaneuf and C. R. Brooks, too, played their positions well, but all their activity was of no avail with a sluggish forward line. The only score of the game was made by Slagle on a kick from directly in front of the goal. The shot; though stopped at first, bounced off the goaler's body through the posts...
...which gives rich promise for the future. His books range from first editions of Thomas Hardy through early Aldines and Elzevirs to Incunabula printed within fifteen years after the invention of the art. Many of the undergraduates whom I know, not content with what our American firms can offer, avail themselves of the richer field of English and continental book catalogues...
...culture in the various towns of Asia Minor, along with the funds and the kind efforts contributed by the American people, all the heroic sacrifices of American missionaries, and all the hopes concerning a revival of that ancient spiritual life and civilization of Asia Minor, will be of no avail whatsoever. And this great peninsula of Asia Minor, stretching toward Europe, which in previous times has served as a bridge for the crossing of western civilization to Asia will now, while in the hands of a powerful and fanatical Turkey, become an impenetrable wall, blocking the passage of progress...
...score was made when MacPhail crossed the goal-line. The second score came when Prendergast broke through to an open-field run of 55 yards. Exeter's final points came from a long lateral pass, Zarakov to MacPhail. After the Freshman eleven had pounded the Academy line to no avail it resorted to passes, but none were successful...
...vote. The suggestion is an interesting one and its reception in the Kansas legislature should be even more interesting. The "100 per cent American" who has graced Fourth of July functions with references to the "starry flag" and the glorious "king of birds" has always exhorted his audiences to avail themselves of that "scared privilege of every redblooded American,--the right to vote." And too often the "sacred privilege" has been utilized by a compact, well-organized body of men who make politics their business,--and by very few others...