Word: final
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Oakes, Green, Mead and Palmer, went to Clarendon Hills yesterday afternoon, and shot a match with the Jamaica Plain club. The team was very hospitably received. The score in the first half was very close, being tied several times. Toward the end the Jamaica Plain men gained steadily. The final score was - Jamaica Plain 88 - Harvard St. Each man shot at ten clay pigeons and ten bats. The best shooting of the day was done by Mr. W. Austin, '87, and Mr. Green, '89. A return match will be shot at Watertown a week from next Saturday...
...decision of Judge Sadler, though not at present in writing final as to the actual issuing of the mandamus against the faculty, which has not yet been done, may be considered as law relating to methods of trying offenders for breach of college discipline, until it may be neutralized by some other legal decision...
...wisely admitted into the common relations of business and life. In regard to that which touches the courts so nearly as the regulation of police removals in New York, Chancellor Howard Crosby, in a recent number of the "Forum," advocates that "the legislature make the board of commissioners' powers final," for under the regulation which allows discharged policemen to appeal to the civil courts, if the commissioners discharge men for what seems to them adequate cause, "the civil courts, with their abounding technicalities, will at once reinstate them...
...Nothing is more unfortunate in the relations we hold with other colleges, than that unfriendly feelings should be engendered by unfounded reports. We are always more than glad to be able to refute such reports. We wish to say one word in regard to the present case, however, before final judgment is passed upon it. The writer of to-day's communication really proves nothing concerning the base-ball men. He simply denies the charge, declaring that documents were brought to Boston to disprove it. As to the foot-ball matter, if there was no game arranged, it seems...
...refusing to teach the chancellors' pets in the higher branches of learning, and by refusing to let their pupils attend the readings of the non-Union teachers. The chapter and chancellor of Paris, seeing their lawful authority thus obstructed, proceeded to imprison the Union teachers, and as a final sentence, excommunicated the recalcitrant masters. Then they strengthened their union more and more. When the masters who were excommunicated appealed to Rome, the Pope recognized these unions as corporations and thus practically gave the teachers the upper hand. These corporations became faculties in the thirteenth century in somewhat the following...