Word: happened
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Yale has lost the championship; there is little use of trying to conceal this fact. We make this apparently premature statement for the reason that we think it impossible for both Brown and Yale to beat Harvard; both of which things would have to happen even to tie Harvard for first place. We shall try to bear our defeat as best we can. It was bound to come some day, as people say of Hanlan. There are many circumstances which lead us to think that fortune is not favorably inclined toward us this year. She began last fall...
...from office, which does not take place except at the end of the period of one, three or five years for which the appointment runs, no such assent is necessary. The name of the appointee is simply dropped; the corporation and overseers need know nothing about it, unless they happen to miss his name from the next year's catalogue...
...most valuable men by sickness, but nevertheless pluckily played out the game. Their whole nine showed a good deal of "sand," especially their catcher, and are very much to be praised for it. Our men did not bester themselves much, and made some errors that would not happen in a more closely contested game. Their batting was good, but their coaching and base running was abominable. The features of the game were Fargo's home run, Gallivan's play at short and Fargo's at third, and a difficult foul catch by Wooster. Williams hurt his thumb in the fourth...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON.- We are told that "mistakes will happen in the best regulated families;" but this well-worn, and it may be very true proverb can by no means excuse the tone which the Lampoon has recently adopted in its editorials relating to the Advocate. While it may not generally be known, yet it must be very easily guessed, that the writer of these editorials attempts at sarcasm and wonderful successes at contemplibleness, is at once the controller of the Lampoon editorial columns, and one of the aspiring editors of the proposed Literary Magazine. I am, it is true...
...become engaged. "I am sensible," he remarks philosophically "that everything depends on the light in which we view it, and nothing more so than marriage. If you think of that weariness which must at times hang over every kind of society, those disgusts and vexations which will happen in the intercourse of life, you will be frightened to take upon you the serious charge of the father of a family; but if you think of the comforts of a home, where you are a sort of sovereign, the kind endearment of an amiable woman, who has no wish...