Word: harbor
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...year for outdoor sports, especially for canoeing. The cool afternoons ought to serve as an inducement for many of the lovers of the double-blade to launch their craft on the river and start for a pleasant paddle up toward Watertown, or down into the rougher water of the harbor. The Canoe Club made a good beginning last spring, by holding a successful regatta; why cannot the experiment be repeated this fall? There can certainly be no better way to arouse interest in the sport. The number of entries made in the races last spring was very respectable, considering...
...Yale Yacht Club will hold its annual regatta in New Haven harbor this afternoon.There will be two more issues of the Lampoon, one probably today, and one, as usual, on class...
...that the Canoe Club has inaugurated its career by a successful regatta, it ought not to allow the interest in the sport to become dormant. It would be a good plan to arrange for one or two cruises up the Charles River, or else down the harbor, before the close of the year. There is nothing more pleasant than a day spent in paddling, and we feel sure that if the club were to try the experiment of a cruise, it would be found successful...
...class of '85, Institute of Technology, is to have an excursion down the harbor this afternoon...
...school and also in the college. An interesting article is Miss Fanny Storie's "Diary of an American Girl in Cairo during the War of 1882." The illustrated papers are "A French-American Seaport," which is an account of the Island of St. Pierre off Newfoundland; "Sailors' Snug Harbor," by Franklin H. North; "American Wild Animals in Art," by Julian Hawthorne; and a scholarly paper by Edward Eggleston on "Commerce in the Colonies." In fiction, Henry James' new story, "Lady Barberina," in this number, concerns itself with the complications of marriage settlements; Mr. Cable's "Dr. Sevier" is continued...