Word: nevers
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...better right to sit in the Harvard stand than the Harvard undergraduate? Is it right that he should be given a miserable seat in the Yale stand, unable to see the game, unable to cheer for his College, when thousands of outsiders who are not now and never have been directly interested in Harvard, have good seats in the Harvard stand? Is it right that a bundle of six hundred tickets should be sent in one installment to the Harvard Club of New York before the seats are opened to season ticket applications? Is it right that the Freshman football...
...important games of the season, and it promises to be the hardest one that has yet been played. The outcome is generally conceded to be a victory for Harvard, but the score will be closer than seemed probable about two weeks ago. At that time Pennsylvania was slumping as never before, but since then the team has shown remarkable improvement under graduate coaching. Today, it will play a very strong game, the strongest game, in fact, which it is capable of. The Harvard players, including Boal, who will resume his old place at guard, are in the best of condition...
...Shaw took the ball. On a double-pass to quarterback, Hatch once made seven or eight yards. Gains were also frequently made through the line because the forwards, by starting before their opponents, usually succeeded in charging them back and opening up holes for the runner. Although the backs never supported the runner any too well, individually they often showed very good judgment in working their way through the line or in dodging around the ends. Lowrie, Livermore and Cook all made repeated gains. Considering that the day was poor and that the contest was class football, the work...
...that Gray's 17 is no longer used by the St. Paul's Society, the room is being remodelled, under the supervision of Mr. Pierre La Rose, for the Cercle Francais. Heretofore the Cercle has never had any quarters of its own, but now, through Mr. James H. Hyde '98, of New York, at one time president of the club, it will have a comfortable and attractive meeting place...
...been much desired by debaters. It was agreed by the representatives of Princeton, Yale and Harvard to abolish the customary banquet after the debate and leave the entertainment of the judges and the visiting team to the discretion of those managing the debates at each college. The banquets have never been successful since they are necessarily held at a very late hour. The judges are tired, and the defeated team is in no mood for enjoyment, while the winners are under constant restraint to keep their satisfaction from adding to the discomfiture of their opponents. The new arrangement bids fair...