Word: boston
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...race under the auspices of the Boston Athletic Association in Boston tomorrow afternoon will furnish the first outside competition this year for the cross-country runners of the University and Freshman squads. Since the affair is open only to military and naval organizations, all the men have been entered as representing the R. O. T. C., and not the University or Freshman class. The cross-country management has filed entry blanks for nearly all of the University and several 1921 runners...
Resuming the game from the University 35 yard mark, the Boston team made 20 yards on a forward pass, and then tried for a field goal. The kick was partially blocked, however, and went as a touchback. For the remainder of the first 25 minute session play was in the middle of the field...
...Brickley '15, captain of the 1914 University eleven, and present coach of the Boston College squad, instructed the drop kickers of both University squads for a short time. After the scrimmage, he expressed his opinion of the University elevens. "The Freshman team looks better than the informals. The line is especially strong, and the quarterbacks show good generalship. It is one of the best Freshmen elevens I have seen...
...development at Hemenway will now develop a lame shoulder in the manual of arms. The man who never missed a meal at Mem tests his patience at the Union. A music lover, however, suffers no such change in his program. This evening, he will renew his acquaintance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and its conductor, Dr. Muck. Enjoyment of the fine arts has not been "Hooverized." That much talked of, and mythical, gentleman, the average undergraduate, may satiate himself with music. To censor the series of concerts, of which this is the first, would add gloom to the gray days...
...after November 2, 1917, letters mailed in Cambridge for delivery through any post office outside the Boston Postal District must bear three cents in postage for each ounce or fraction thereof. United States postal cards must have one cent in postage affixed in addition to the stamp printed thereon. This rate applies to any address. Private post cards bearing written inscriptions must also have two cents in postage affixed. The Boston Postal District within which the rate on first class matter will remain unchanged, includes Boston and towns in the immediate vicinity...