Word: known
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...showed a little more fierceness in his play there would be little fault to find with him. Haskell is steady and strong. He follows the ball well and is apt to get it on a fumble. He knows his position thoroughly. Shaw's present good work is too well known to need comment. If he does not play Saturday it will be due to some physical disability rather than to any doubt as to the excellence of his play. Boal is a fierce rusher and plays a strong and aggressive game, but one not entirely safe on the defensive. Doucette...
...individual religious life of Harvard men. It is planned to hold these union services about once a month during the college year. At each meeting an address will be given by some prominent man who will be selected, not because he represents any particular sect, but because he is known to be interested in students. The meeting tomorrow evening will be addressed by Dean Hodges of the Episcopal Theological School. The religious societies cordially invite all members of the University to attend...
...well known fact that it takes two teams to play a football game. Yet we take the liberty to doubt seriously whether one in ten of the opinions so confidently expressed are based on any intimate knowledge of the doings of one of the teams, to say nothing of the other. There is noticeable, on the other hand, among those whose technical knowledge of football and careful observation of both teams, make them really competent critics, a marked degree of modesty, a reluctance to commit themselves as to the outcome. Indeed as the day draws nearer it becomes more...
Professor W. M. Davis lectured last evening in the Fogg Lecture Room on the subject, "A Sketch of the Physical Features of France." Professor Davis outlined the geography of France and showed that many of its features are almost perfect types of well known physiographical phenomena of nature...
...George W. Beavers, the head of the Bureau of Salaries and Allowances, has informed Col. H. A. Thomas, postmaster of the Boston District, that no other option will be offered them and the offices will have to be known by their present names. The affair would evidently have been ended some time ago if Col Thomas had realized that there is only a small part of Cambridgeport which cares about changing the name...