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Word: inferiorated (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Society is much to be congratulated on the enterprising steps which it has recently taken. All the athletic goods and gentlemen's furnishings have been moved into a room adjoining the regular office and the stock has been increased to double or treble its former size. The goods are inferior to none which are sold in Cambridge, and as all goods are guaranteed we think the society ought to have the trade of all Harvard men. The Society has lately made the suits of the freshman lacrosse and the '88 tug-of-war teams and is now engaged...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/26/1887 | See Source »

...factor. The team has but two of its nine of 1886, and enters the new league under the most unfavorable conditions. If it makes a good showing, it will be contrary to expectations. The impression prevails that the Columbia nine will be the weak member of the quartet, inferior to the Dartmouth and Williams nines surely, and perhaps to the other two clubs of the old league. The triangular league would have undoubtedly been the best in every way, for the objections that were made to the "weaker" college nines remaining in the league surely appertain to Columbia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Note and Comment. | 4/5/1887 | See Source »

...contest with the smaller colleges, if she does not see fit to join them, has begun to work consequences of no little moment. It is reported that some members of the nine are about to give up practice if they are to be compelled to play with inferior nines. Although the college has voted once for all not to join the triangular league, still another meeting will probably be called in a day or two and perhaps the former vote will be reconsidered. There seems to be no doubt that if Columbia is admitted, Yale will only be too happy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Coming Round. | 3/9/1887 | See Source »

...boast of the advance of America beyond the old world in the solution of the public questions of the times and in practical affairs, we yet feel little humiliation that in the artistic and, to a certain extent, in the scholarly world we are still far inferior to our European brothers. Every day we watch with complacency the departure of friends "to study abroad." With unconcern we see the annual exodus of a quota of our graduating classes to Berlin, Paris, and other foreign centres of learning; and yet we know that this flight for knowledge is a confession...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/7/1887 | See Source »

...Friday night last, while Harvard was declaring that the old base-ball league was an inferior one, and that a new association, composed of better clubs, should be formed, Princeton likewise was discussing, in mass meeting, the project of forming a new league. The college voted to confer unlimited powers upon the base-ball management. So, now, the question is on a fair way to settlement. The old association meets upon Friday of this week, and it is hoped that all the arrangements for the new league will be completed before that time. Action by the management at Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton Mass Meeting. | 3/7/1887 | See Source »

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