Word: honored
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Yale Club of New York will give a dinner tonight at Sherry's in honor of President Hadley. Invitations have been sent to prominent Yale men throughout the country, and among the speakers will be Judge Howland and Hon. Chauncey M. Depew...
...dinner in honor of last year's University crews will be held at the American House this evening. The following men will speak: President Eliot, Major Henry L. Higginson, Governor Roosevelt, C. C. Beaman, president of the University Club of New York; Hon. W. H. Moody, Professor Ira N. Hollis, E. C. Storrow, Gen. W. A. Bancroft, B. H. Dibblee '99, and F. L. Higginson '00. Other invited guests are G. S. Mumford, Gen. A. L. Devens, and the members of last years nine, the point winners in the Mott Haven games, and the Freshman crew. The dinner will...
...exceedingly small proportion to the total number issued. The accusation that some of the players and coaches have sold their tickets to speculators is probably without foundation. When we consider that undergraduates have all been offered good prices for their tickets, it speaks well for their sense of honor that so few of them have yielded. It was hoped that the large number of seats constructed around the field would effectually check speculation, and to that end the management deliberately put money into seats it did not expect to sell. Under the circumstances, the common delusion that any undergraduate...
...Harvard football management in regard to the purchase by speculators of seats for the Yale game does not compare favorably with the zeal shown by the Yale management in keeping the Yale sections for the exclusive use of Yale men. The Yale News says: "It is a matter of honor that no tickets allotted to a Yale undergraduate be found in the hands of speculators." The Yale football management, in announcing the conditions of seat allotment for the Princeton game, says. "Each applicant is responsible for the tickets allotted him, and the management will print the names of hands...
...perfect four, Averill won the fourteenth, and was then two up. The fifteenth hole was halved in five, and the sixteenth in six. Averill won the seventeenth, 5-6, as Pyne made a poor shot from the woods for his third. The players halved the honor hole in a far three leaving Averill three up on the morning play...