Word: finds
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...twenty-minute halves against the Exeter Academy team yesterday afternoon. Exeter brought down a very good team. Her centre was very fairly strong and her whole rush line play was much quicker than Harvard's. The two backs, Thomas and Haradon, made some excellent rushes, and seemed to find little difficulty in going through the centre of Harvard's line and occasionally around the ends...
...School this year is in every way most gratifying. If crowded lecture rooms are any indication of prosperity there is no doubt that the Law School this year is thriving. Every desk in the library and study room is occupied and a number of students are unable to find room to put their books. Besides this additional accommodations have been put in the lecture rooms in the way of new rows of desks and chairs, and still there is a good deal of crowding...
Today Ninety-one's undergraduate life will close. It is for us who are left behind to tell how successfully her course has been run. We wish we could find words graceful enough to pay even a part of the tribute which is owing to the class about to graduate. Its most striking characteristic, perhaps, is the steadfastness with which it has followed out the liberal and progressive spirit of the University. Many changes, radical in outward form, have taken place in Harvard during the past four years; yet at the bottom they have all been but the exemplars...
TOMORROW is the last day the John Harvard Souvenir Spoon will be for sale in Cambridge. You can find them at D. H. Law's, 460 Harvard St. Also full line of popular spoons, including the Paul Revere Midnight Ride...
...Austrian poet, almost unknown in this country. Born in Hungary, he entered the University of Vienna, where he stood well in his studies, but was not inclined towards any one of them. In later years a restless desire for new scenery drove him to America, where he hoped to find his Elysium. How he found it, and his impression of this country, is well shown in his letters home, where he describes, in terms that would be rather humorous were there not a grain of truth in them, the haste and worry of Americans and what he considers their inordinate...