Word: look
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...report of the president of the association, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge, '84, contains so much information and so many valuable suggestions in regard to the H. A. A., that we print below some extracts from it. "We cannot look forward to continued success in general athletics without a good out-of-door trainer, and it should be the first duty of the executive committee, after their election, to get the best possible man for the place. Such a man can be found near at hand, if the consent of the athletic committee is obtained, inasmuch as the corporation will give...
Dartmouth has been done for; now for Yale and the championship. Only one more game in the regular series remains to be played, and from the recent showing of the nine, the college can look forward with confidence to see still another victory scored for Harvard on Saturday next. In case we win, there is every chance of our gaining the championship; if we lose, the championship is lost...
...their great phenomenal pitcher, Dr. Pope. Both sides are out for a holiday, and fun is likely to ensue. Although the "Doctor" has said that he expects today will be the event of his life, and it is rumored that his delivery will be marvelously puzzling, we do not look forward to a defeat for our nine. Instead, if their streak of batting has lasted over from Saturday, we shall expect to see them derive much benefit from practice in base running. With this warning before them, we cannot expect otherwise than to see a large audience assembled to witness...
...some department of study. Each of these secures to the successful competitor four hundred dollars a year for one or (in cases of exceptional merit) for two years. Any young man of really high altainments and character securing one of the scholarships, and doing thoroughly well in it, may look forward with strong hope to securing one of these fellowships, which will enable him to prosecute post-graduate studies...
...Legendre" which the Columbia sophomores perform annually with great pomp and circumstance. Not one of the least peculiar circumstances connected with the burial is the fact that it takes place in the great city of New York amid the bustle and hurry of Metropolitan life, while the people look on and wonder at the strange doings of the jolly and happy sophomores, who seem not at all abashed by the publicity of the event. At about ten o'clock one evening last week the Columbia sophomores, assisted by the juniors, some three hundred in all, assembled in front...