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Word: ending (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Harvard-Rushers: Cumnock, left end; Upton, left tackle; Cranston, left guard; Tilton, centre; P. D. Trafford, right guard; Stickney, right tackle; Crosby (Hutchinson), right end; Dean, quarter-back: Lee, Saxe, (Fearing), half-backs; B. W. Trafford, full-back...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Yale Game. | 11/23/1889 | See Source »

Yale-Rushers: Hartwell (Town-send), right end; Rhodes (Adams), right tackle; Ferris (Newell), right guard; Hanson, centre; Heffelfinger, left guard; Gill, left tackle; Stagg, left end; Wurtemburg, quarterback; B. Morrison, McClung, half-backs; McBride, full-back...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Yale Game. | 11/23/1889 | See Source »

...played well; but after that time the team went all to pieces, and could not do another bit of effectual work. The Athletic club eleven played a fairly good game, considering their lack of training. Peters and Hunt, at half back, did some good rushing, and Morrison, at left end, played an excellent game. Both teams showed an inclination to play roughly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: B. A. A., 10; Harvard, '93, 5. | 11/22/1889 | See Source »

...lectures on German literature. His subject was "Luther as a Writer." The history of the German people in the sixteenth century, said Professor Francke, was wonderfully strange and sad. At the beginning of the century Germany stood at the head of the movement for truth and light; at the end, the Catholic church was there, in the very home of Protestantism, slowly and surely gaining ground. The chief reason for this was that the question of reforming the church was becoming political. When Luther left the Diet of Worms the heart of the people went with him. Princes, cities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Francke's Lecture. | 11/22/1889 | See Source »

...terrified at the consequences of the doctrine of the Anabaptists and others, who claimed like himself to have cast aside all authority and to teach from divine inspiration, began to doubt his own position. The agony of his soul's struggle we can but faintly understand. At the end of it he was no longer the champion of reason and religious individualism but their greatest defamer. It was in this spirit that he urged the persecution of the peasants, and disputed with Zivingli at Marburg concerning the Eucharist. There was something naively terrible in the vehemence with which he devoted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Francke's Lecture. | 11/22/1889 | See Source »

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