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...discontinued and gave away to its occupation by votaries of the larger college sports. In 1864, October 12, the "University Base Ball Club" was formed. We are informed that "in the spring of 1863 the Cambridge City Government granted the use of part of the common near the Washington Elm for practice ground" and that "this was used until the spring of 1864". The old ground on the common was then given up and the Delta now partially occupied by Memorial Hall was taken possession of by the permission of the college faculty. In the spring of "65 the 'Varsity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Delta. | 10/28/1884 | See Source »

Just at this season Oxford is in its glory-in its natural academic and social glory. The great elm trees that abound in all the gardens and that line the banks of the Isis are in their first and freshest foliage. The ivy and the roses are climbing walls of edifices and gardens and are now in full leaf and flower. The lawns and green-swards are as trim as art and labor can keep them, and as soft to the foot-step as velvet, and as the habit of a thousand years could make them. Today the examinations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OXFORD AT COMMEMORATION. | 12/21/1883 | See Source »

...main contents of the visitors room are huge folios which are "not to be handled without permission. "By way of relics, there is a brand new book carved out of a piece of wood taken from the Washington Elm. On the back is a picture of the old tree with its affluent branches, making a "cavern of cool shade." Below the roots of the tree is a pretty little scene representing a very wooden-looking soldier about to charge into the mouth of an innocent-looking cannon which protects a camp of wigwam-like tents. This book has a feature...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HARVARD LIBRARY. | 3/5/1883 | See Source »

...loss of life from insufficient means of escape for the inmates of the building. The Record also has lately been agitating this question; and now we learn from the Yale News that, "In each entry of Durfee one of the upmost story rooms is to be provided on the Elm-street side with a suitably attached knotted rope long enough to reach the ground. In each of the old buildings and in Farnam much the same contrivance is to be adopted in each entry, the rope, however, being attached at the highest of the hallway. In the old chapel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COLLEGE WORLD. | 3/9/1882 | See Source »

...elm and aspen frail...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUNSHINE. | 6/18/1880 | See Source »

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