Word: first
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Only the first regular 7.30 delivery will be made from the Cambridge Post Office...
Battery A and the First Corps of Cadets will play their fifth annual football game in the Stadium tomorrow morning at 10.30 o'clock. Admission will be by complimentary tickets only, except for holders of H. A. A. tickets who will be admitted without extra charge. Of the four games it has played Battery A has won three and tied one. The line-up, which contains a number of Harvard men, is as follows: BATTERY A. CADETS. S. S. Rodgers '09, l.e. r.e., Talbot Andrews, l.t. r.t., Nichols T. H. Barber '11, l.g. r.g., Gutterson Hooper, c. c., Ware...
...committee will receive petitions up to the closing of the docket of the Massachusetts Legislature toward the end of January from any member of the University with regard to presenting bills on any subject. The first meeting of the committee will be held on December 7 at a place to be announced later. Petitions to be discussed at this meeting must be mailed, addressed to the committee, Box 84, at least a week before the meeting, with the signed statement that the petitioner will appear and argue for the bill at the session...
...ease and modesty; his last two lines are particularly pleasing. Mr. R. A. Morton writes of the Boylston street bridge, using fact, imagination, and a photograph. The style is somewhat journalese. Mr. Fang Shik Chien writes on "The American Football in the Eye of an Oriental." When the football first came into his eye, Mr. Chien says, he disliked it, but now he appreciates it as the leading college activity and he is an enthusiast on the subject. Mr. Fish writes briefly on The Varsity; Mr. R. H. Smith and N. R. Gifford contribute a long article, with many pictures...
...verse is very much better. The first stanza of Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez's "The Game" is as good as any undergraduate verse one is likely to see in a long time, and the entire poem, though it does not keep up to this high level, is notable in its sincerity and vigor. Mr. Pulsifer's "The Riderless Horse" presents a striking idea with effective brevity, the difficult verse-form is fairly well handled, and the phrasing is at times admirable. The same writer's "Third Down," however, suffers from its close resemblance to four lines of Browning's "Meeting...