Word: manly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Stagg, and during the latter part of the game his pitching was much less effective The features of the game were the heavy batting of McClintock, Calhoun and Payne. Noyes, Yale's captain, did not seem to play as well as usual and his three errors were costly. Every man on Princeton's team did good work at some part of the game, but the only Yale men who really played good ball were Calhonn, McBride and McClintock. Appended is the score...
...based upon his examinations for the past ten years, which will soon be published. When the gymnasium was opened in 1880, about nine hundred students were examined. The highest individual total was then 675. Since then 240 men have been examined with totals above the highest in 1880, one man reaching a total of 1272.8. We give below a list of those who have exceeded a total of 900. The parts tested are the back, legs, arms, grip and lungs...
...yard lines, six rings in all. From each ring five balls are kicked each day. A goal from the 25-yard line counts one point, from the 35-yard line, two points, and from the 45-yard line, three points. Marvin, '89, is the only man who has kicked a goal from the 45-yard line, although others have come very near it. The following score was made out without reference to the 45-yard line, hence the highest possible score is 150 pints...
During the last century France has had to expiate her crime of allowing so many centuries of evil government. But now at last she is free. It is not a prince of the royal blood, but a man made famous by the movement for liberty, who is now the ruler of the country. The nation has finally reached the goal toward which it has been struggling, and is only the more fixed there for her agonies. Social as well as political lessons have been taught by the Revolution. The government now recognizes the necessity of education for the masses...
...very exasprerating for men who have tried year after without success, to see the best rooms go to men who have not yet entered college, many of whom have never even been in Cambridge. It would be much fairer if the allotment were according to seniority. Then every man could look forward with certainty to two or possibly three years in the yard. Such an arrangement could easily be put into effect and would remedy a real grievance without injustice to anyone...