Word: pack
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...growth of sentiment is away from declamation which perhaps once flourished in the University, and toward debate. This is shown by the fact that the Boylston Prize contests which used to pack Sanders Theatre now gather hardly a handful. The intercollegiate debates on the contrary are better attended and attract more interest each year. The College offers no opportunity for training in declamation while there has been a substantial growth in the instruction given in debate. English 6 has increased in numbers and English 30 has been added; English 10 looks toward debate rather than declamation...
...course, at first over very rough ground, was out Boylston street, across the marshes, through Allston, and over Corey Hill to the Chestnut Hill Reservoir. At this point the scent was lost, owing to the darkness, and the pack of 17 turned back to Cambridge, reaching home an hour and forty minutes after the start. A. Ingersoll '96, was first, H. W. Foote '97, second, and F. L. Waldo '98, third. The first two were close together. Fourteen minutes later, the hares, D. Grant, Sp., and A. W. Blakemore '98, appeared, having run around the reservoirs, through Brookline and into...
Yesterday afternoon the second run of the hare and hounds took place. Blakemore '97 and Grant L. S. S. were the hares, and there was a large pack of hounds. The run started from the gymnasium, going towards North Cambridge and passing near the clay pits. Then it swung around through the marshes in that neighborhood, crossed the railroad two or three times, finally coming out at Fresh Pond. From there the hares led them toward Mt. Auburn, returning by Brighton and Soldiers Field. The break was made at Barry Corner. A. Ingraham '96 was first, H. Foote, second...
ANOTHER OF THE PACK...
...PACK...