Word: f
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Dates: during 1870-1879
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...most renowned of American colleges, and Yale her Tochteranstalt. These are almost the only true statements which he makes. His pictures of college life are even falser than the Herald's, and must have been taken from "Student Life at Harvard" or derived from a correspondence with Dr. F-h-b-r. Here is one of the conversations...
...football team to play Yale will be chosen from the following: G. F. Morse, '81; Manning, '82; Cushing, L. S.: Brooks, L. S.; Warren, '82; Cushing, M. S.; Tebbets, '80; Houston, L. S.; Thacher, '82; Nickerson, '80; Winsor, '80; Austin, L. S.; Holden, '81; Bacon (Capt.) '80; Cabot, '83; Shattuck, L. S.; Leatherbee...
...F. H. S. - By George...
...many of us have learned, that the Borsair is by no means easy to get along with. The next man was pitched out, and the third scraped the airy vault of heaven with what seemed to every one a home run; but little they recked of the noble L. F., the heroic Blister; this gallant man, with measured step and song, froze to the sphere with one hand while running backward, and the Hod-lifters retired with no runs...
...quick succession, and all eyes were turned on Blister, who, with swelling chest, wielded the ponderous ash. Cunners swore it was as exciting as the time he sold the little dog to Mrs. G. Our hero, having soared the air in vain once, knocked a daisy-cutter to C. F., and reached first in safety; Bones rung in a two-baser; Cunners stole his base on three strikes; and Oranges, with a three-baser, brought all his "friends" home. Here the Harvards' success ended; the Borsair failed to make anything, (mirabile dictu!), and the score stood 3-0 in favor...