Word: objectionably
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A RECENT writer in the Saturday Evening Gazette of March 26 last, with the usual spirit of fair play which characterizes the attitude of most of the Boston papers toward Harvard, took occasion to make some mean-spirited and untruthful insinuations in regard to the conduct of the '83 crew...
The limiting of the weight of the tug-of-war teams to 600 pounds ought to bring out a goodly number of entries. Last year we did not send a team for this event, as our heavy men were all engaged in trying for the 'Varsity; but this year no...
Looking only to the present, there was no cause for the action of the authorities, as only three of the young ladies were accustomed to use these alcoves, - so few that objection could not be made to the room which they occupied. Looking, however, to the future, the action of...
The author of the letter to the Advocate does not answer his question in objection No. 2, - "Did '83 gain more renown by winning the class race than by their victory over Columbia?" If an '83 man were to answer, he might say, "No, we did not;" but the spectators...
In objection 4, the Crimson's statement is indorsed. Captain Bancroft was perfectly right in telling '81 that only by her rowing Cornell could the 'Varsity be kept up; there were no class races to rely upon then. He was right, again, in advising '82 to row Columbia, because he...