Word: kept
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...average of 75.2 percent.; the corresponding cup in Class B has been awarded to F. F. A. Pearson '11. The cups are given on the basis of the highest average in both team matches and practice, and a record of every shot fired during the season has been kept. The cup in Class A is open to competition by all men eligible for the University team; that in Class B is open to those not eligible for the team. The competition in Class A was very close this year; C. L. Hauthaway '10 had an average of 74.7 per cent...
...Sophomores defeated the Freshmen yesterday afternoon in the second game of the interclass basketball series by the score at the end of the first half was 12 to 5, the Sophomores having established a lead of seven points which they kept consistently throughout the game. Superior team play and condition, as well as the excellent goal shooting of Sheehan, Lanigan and Scribner, won for the Sophomores. Case and Webber played the best game for the Freshmen...
Both University and dormitory rowing have been discontinued for this fall. Candidates for the University and Freshman crews will be called out after the mid-year period, and work on the machines and in the tank will be kept up until the river is open. Coach Wray will have complete charge of the University crew squad, and, assisted by Coaches Stephenson and Brown, will supervise the work of the Freshman squad
Both guard positions are filled by men who played in other positions in past years. Captain Parker was transferred from centre, and W. Peirce was shifted over from tackle. Parker is very quick for a man of his weight, but has been kept out of several games this fall on account of injuries to his back and shoulder. Peirce plays a hard game but is inclined to be over-aggressive. Hear has been developed into a first-rate substitute for Parker's position. The other substitute guards are Brock, Gilmore and Forchheimer...
...second floor, and adjoining the general reading-room, is a large room which will be known as the Treasure Room. Here will eventually be collected all the rare books and many of the manuscripts of the Library,--everything which, on account of its rarity or value, has to be kept under lock and key and ought to be used under proper supervision. The room not yet being occupied for this purpose, there will be exhibited here for the next three weeks, a collection of memories of John Harvard and his contemporaries. This collection includes portraits, autographs, and books, beside early...