Word: hearings
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...CRIMSON has no claims to be heeded beyond graduation and we modestly retire now that the curtain has dropped upon another year. But we trust that next year will see the Harvard professional schools crowded with members of the present senior class, although we never again may hear a full toned...
...second time, the representatives of the CRIMSON won the amateur base-ball championship of the university and captured the cups offered by the management of the H. U. B. B. C. If there is another field to which we can now turn for laurels, we shall be happy to hear of such through our drop-box at Memorial. We take this opportunity to offer a formal challenge to any amateur lacrosse twelve in the university to contest for the championship in that sport...
...take great pleasure in commending the manager of the freshman nine, who by his diligence and care, has brought the nine out so well financially, as to have quite a surplus at the end of the season. In these times, when we hear so much about "debts of several hundred - or several thousand - dollars," left by treasurers and managers of various college societies and associations for their successors to pay, it is a pleasure to meet with such a thorough, conscientious manager as Mr. Woodbury. He has not only paid up all the expenses of the nine...
...Yale Men Say," and "Marching Through Georgia," the freshman made the walls of the old dormitories echo and re-echo with the sound of their prolonged "rah's." Transparencies bearing the names of the freshman nine and trenchant sarcasm upon Yale, the CRIMSON and others who expected to hear of defeat at the hands of the 'Blue' freshmen were displayed. After the yard had been traversed and re-traversed, the transparencies and the nine took up their position upon the steps of University, where cheers for Harvard, the individual players, the classes, the games, and especially for '89 were indulged...
...sorry to hear that the freshman class is taking such little apparent interest in the affairs of their class crew. When the crew first got on the water a number of men used to go down to the boat-house, and encourage the members of the crew by their presence. Now there is scarcely ever a freshman at the boat-house outside the crew, and it is now more than ever that the members of the crew need encouragement and support. This year they are going to meet Yale as well as Columbia on the water, and will accordingly have...