Word: effective
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...there is ice, the Seniors and the Sophomores will play the second game of the series this afternoon at 3.30 o'clock in the Stadium. In case the game is postponed or is to be played elsewhere, a notice to that effect will be posted in Leavitt & Peirce...
...hockey team will play its first game of the season with the Crescent Hockey Club of Boston, this afternoon in the Stadium at 3 o'clock, provided the ice is in suitable condition. If the game is not to be played there a notice will be posted to that effect in the Rendezvous...
...rash, but I venture to make a suggestion, that for one number the editors do not confine themselves to composing the editorial and "By the Way," but write the whole number, and then send out canvassers for new subscribers. No one knows what might happen. At present the effect of our college journalism on readers in other institutions is much what might be expected if the first and the second elevens confined themselves to coaching the Freshman team to play Yale. If this suggestion seems to the present board preposterous, perhaps they might be induced to state under the title...
...believe that we are safe in assuming that the hockey team would hold practice in spite of the rain, if it were not for the unpleasant effect of warm water on ice. Yet rain seems to be the only excuse for the fact that the number of track candidates who reported yesterday for work held almost entirely indoors, was about one-third of the number who appeared for the first day's practice last winter. We do not believe that the track situation is in as serious a condition as these figures would indicate, and we hope that the next...
...life and customs of the people. Like many other plays of the period, "Bartholomew Fair", contains many references to contemporary writers and playwrights, and the customary humorous flings at the Puritans and other strict sects. Though there is a fair plot to the play, it depends for its effect mainly on its humor and burlesque, of the sort common at country fairs in early England...