Word: list
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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WEEK-DAY Lenten services are more numerous in Cambridge this year than last. The following is the list at Christ Church (until Holy Week): Mondays and Wednesdays at 9 A.M., Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4.30 P.M., Fridays at 7.30 P.M. At the Friday service there will be a lecture; at the other services a short address or reading. At St. John's Church a shortened service is held daily at 8 A.M. Students may by petition attend this during Lent instead of the College Prayers. Evening prayer is said at 5 P.M., and is followed on Fridays by a lecture...
...response to numerous requests from members of the University, we present this week a list of those best American Amateur records which are held by Mr. L. E. Myers of the Manhattan Club, New York, the gentleman who is to represent America in the English Amateur championships this spring. Up to November 20th last, Mr. Myers held, in addition to the following list, the best record at 300 yards and 350 yards running, with records of 34 1-5 and 39 seconds respectively; but on the above date Mr. R. S. Haley of the Olympic Club, San Francisco, succeeded...
...London Athletic Club have made him an honorary member of their club, so that on his arrival he will have every opportunity given him to prepare for his contests. Appended is the desired list...
...Running Broad Jump are thus left without representatives. In the sports with Yale we shall probably want at least two representatives in each event, and possibly more; and it must be remembered that all of the above are events in which much careful practice is absolutely necessary. To this list of events, for which we have absolutely no representatives at present, let us add the Hurdles, the 1/2-Mile Run, and the Tug of War. For this latter event, in which we are totally unskilled, we ought to have a team already at work, for it is a game in which...
THERE are many societies in College, and the janitors - who are never known to fail in any thing except their work - have determined to add another to the list. The society which they intend to form has for its object not the pursuit of knowledge, but simply pleasure. The janitors and goodies expect to give a ball every year. They feel that they are overworked in taking care of students' rooms, and that they must have some relaxation to bring back their health, shattered by almost constant application of the broom and duster. There is another reason, too, which prompts...