Word: paged
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Exonian is jubilant about the victory of Exeter over Andover at foot-ball. The first page is decorated with a large rooster...
...another page we print a communication from a graduate who sees fit to criticise the ground taken by our correspondent who, in one of our issues of last week, took occasion to find fault with the methods pursued by some of the reporters of the Boston dailies in their accounts of recent accidents at Harvard. We think that this letter requires no comment, other than the remarks that the reports published in the Boston press were dressed in most glaring colors and had but a thin thread of truth running through them. We must again make a distinction between...
...ideas of the Williams Literary Magazine on base-ball, as given yesterday on our first page, are interesting and somewhat significant. Because so this magazine says, it is a foregone conclusion that Harvard, Yale and Princeton will take the first three places in the present league, and because it is always claimed, "whether the claim be just or not," that the umpires are partial to the larger colleges, and finally because Williams herself has no possibility of getting into the league as now constituted, the plan of forming a new league to include Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth and Williams, is urged...
GERMAN DEPT. I regret to be unable to resume any of courses before Monday, Nov. 16. German 1 will be held responsible for "Die Braune Erica" as far as the end of the second paragraph of page 49. German 3 is expected to have finished Minna von Barnhelm by the end of this week. In German 6. I expect the first papers on Wednesday...
...another page we print a protest against the present course pursued in that branch of the English department which has to do with the prescribed sophomore themes. Looking at the subject impartially, we think the writer has fairly stated the case and from the numerous complaints that have reached us, we judge that his opinions are shared by a large number of men in the class. One piece of descriptive writing is worth, to the student, half a dozen criticisms, no matter how well or carefully the latter may be written. It seems like reiterating a self evident truth...