Word: far
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...umpiring in Saturday's game was far from satisfactory...
...office of the director of the Hemenway gymnasium. The committee will be glad to meet at this hour and place any officer or member of any athletic organization who may have business to present or may desire information concerning the action of the committee. All matters, as far as possible, should previously be presented to the secretary in writing. But the committee desires especially the oral consideration of questions relating to athletic interests, and is ready to hold extra meetings for this purpose if necessary. The members of the committee are Dr. D. A. Sargent, chairman, Dr. H. P. Walcott...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - May, I trespass a little upon your space to make a few remarks on a subject, which, so far as I see, has as yet been but gingerly handled? The day after the "rush" between '88 and '89, harmless and good-natured as it was, the Boston press, notably the Herald, was filled with highly sensational accounts of the affair; these statements were at once copied over the country under the title of "Ruffianism at Harvard." As a specimen of the incorrect statements that got afloat, I received yesterday a letter from an anxious relative asking about...
...takes a look in the library any morning or afternoon and reflects, as he sees the men at work, on how small their number is when compared with the whole university, he must necessarily think of the opportunities which by far the greatest portion of the students are throwing away. For example, out of the hundred or more men in History XIII hardly fifteen daily make use of the books reserved by Dr. Hart, although a large amount of reference work is necessary in that course in order to reap its full benefit. The advantages of a library like...
...money, will read with deep satisfaction the announcement that the Charles River horse cars may now be ridden upon for four cents. The outlook is now promising indeed. May we not expect that the railroad war thus inaugurated will rage with ever increasing fierceness until its results shall far exceed anything yet known in the history of Cambridge travelling? What can be more obvious than that the Cambridge road will promptly reduce its fares to three cents, and that the rival lines will continue to "see each other and go one lower" until both roads begin to offer premiums...