Word: final
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Columbia has positively refused to play Harvard on Saturday next. Mr. Clark, the manager of the Harvard Association, telegraphed to New York twice last week, to make arrangements for the game. He received no answer however. On Monday last he telegraphed again for information, and finally received an answer stating that the Columbia team would come. Tuesday, Mr. Clark received a telegram asking that the game be played in New York, as the members of the Columbia team refused to come unless their expenses were paid (by their own college, of course) before the game. But as all the arrangements...
...next kick-off the ball again approached Princeton's line, and from a fumble by Baker Kendall scored a touchdown for Harvard, but the try-for-goal was a failure. The inning closed with the score 7 to 6 in Harvard's favor, exactly the same as the final score last year, and Harvard began to feel victory near at hand. Moffat's famous kicking had not as yet been seen and so was not reckoned on, but the so and three quarters was nothing but a contest between the phenomenal kicking of this brilliant half-back and the dogged...
...Substitute the following for the latter part. The four annual aggregates of each member of the graduating class are reduced to a uniform standard and combined to form a final rank-list, called the General Scale...
...passed back to Moffat, who kicked another goal. After play back and forth, DeCamp got the ball and rushed across the line, but was tackled and lost the ball, so that a safety for Wesleyan was the only result. In a few moments more time was called, with a final score of 24 points to nothing in Princeton's favor...
...comes to America for the purpose of earning money he can not be expected to give us this lecture. A book therefore has been placed at Bartlett's for the names of those who wish to subscribe for tickets at one dollar apiece, and before final arrangements are made with Mr. Arnold one hundred and twenty-five dollars must be raised to pay expenses. We think it would be a lasting shame to Harvard College and its students if this plan fell through. It would reflect so seriously and prove so completely our indifference when the opportunity is so unusual...