Word: pasted
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...announced that the Vesper services which have been very successful during the past two years will be continued this winter. The first service will be held on Thursday, Dec. 6, beginning at five o'clock...
...pretty well determined. At present it seems probable that the team will be fully as strong as that of last year, all tales to the contrary notwithstanding. All of the men who have been laid up are now at work and the playing has much improved during the past week. Wallace and Stag are now playing ends. This is Wallace's fifth year. Stag is a new man at foot-ball, but is playing very well. Both tacklers, Gill and Rhodes, have been laid up for three weeks but are now playing again though the latter is still lame. Woodruff...
...additions to the Agassiz and Peabody Museums, which were begun early last spring, have been pushed forward so rapidly during the past summer that work on the interior has commenced. The extension to the Peabody Museum is about forty feet deep and will be used principally for exhibition rooms. There are many archaeological specimens, now stored away or crowded in the used portion, which will be placed in the new part. The original building and addition form together two-fifths of the contemplated structure...
...after a hard run of twelve miles. Twelve hounds started, but several dropped out at Fresh Pond as the pace was very fast. Going through the Newtons, Davis and Priest went ahead and the rest chartered a wagon and rode some distance. Davis reached the gymnasium at five minutes past five, only ten minutes after the hares, followed a minute later by Seelye, L. S., and three minutes later by Priest, '91. As the time allowance was fifteen minutes, the hounds won with five minutes to spare. Cups will be given to Davis, and probably to Priest...
...publish portions of a long article on "Athletics at Harvard," taken from the Boston Herald. The author of the article is a well known graduate of this college, who, like the great majority of Harvard men is totally disgusted at the phase which athletics have assumed here during the past few years. The successive defeats of Harvard teams are attributed to the intermeddling of the faculty in athletics-an institution which the faculty, in its ill-judged endeavor to remodel and reorganize, has only succeed in working incalculable harm...