Word: past
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON.- There has appeard in the CRIMSON several times during the past few weeks the surprising statement that for many years Harvard has not won the freshman base-ball series with Yale. Now, as a matter of fact, the freshman series between Harvard, '87, and Yale, '87, was won by Harvard. The facts of the case last year were these; Yale, '87, won the first game of the series at New Haven. The second game, played here, resulted in a victory for Harvard '87, by the score of 5 to 1. Each team having won a game...
Although the hour of the performance was placed at eight, it was not until twenty minutes past the hour that the curtain was drawn aside exhibiting to the audience what purported to be a Roman...
...five years the Mott Haven cup has remained at Cambridge, and now it has come back to us for the sixth time, having been won by our track athletes in spite of the gross unfairness displayed by the managers of the intercollegiate games. Truly, the faithful work of the past year has met its fitting reward. The result of the game against Princeton was but another proof of the strength of our nine. As the score now stands we can see no reason why the base-ball championship should not come to Harvard. The brilliant record of Captain Winslow...
...struggle for the pennant. Our track athletes will endeavor to retain the Mott Haven Cup which has been so long in our possession as to seem almost like a fixture. Of our success in this endeavor there can be but little question. The steady and faithful work of the past winter cannot fail to meet its proper reward. Of the third event in which the college is concerned, but little remains to be said. The freshman championship has been held so long at New Haven that we have come to regard it as almost the personal property of Yale...
...college study as pursued in elective courses. One of the strongest arguments against the elective system has been that an average freshman or sophomore is not of a sufficiently mature judgment to be fitted for a proper choice of what studies he ought to pursue. Harvard has in the past strongly urged the students to consult with the professors before making a final choice of studies. But never before has a class as a whole been able to avail itself of the advice of the President in his official capacity, and the custom once inaugurated ought not to be discontinued...