Word: regardful
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...University-at the usual rate, $2 a ticket. One-half the house will be reserved for those purchasing two-dollar tickets, while the other half will be reserved for the purchasers of one dollar tickets. A notice will be put in the CRIMSON in a day or two in regard to the sale of tickets...
...hoped that there may never be a repetition of the unfortunate misunderstanding which prevented the playing of the annual Harvard-Yale football game last fall. With a view to this, representatives of the two colleges have, during the past week, endeavored to come to some agreement in regard to the place where the game shall be played. It is gratifying to note that there is every reason to hope that a satisfactory arrangement will be concluded. The arrangement will be for a permanent meeting place. This is very desirable as it will do away with the annual discussion which would...
...crew regularly until after June 10, but from that time until after the Harvard race he will be with them constantly. Early in May, Captain Rogers, '87, will take charge of the crew and look after them until the arrival of Captain Cook. Nothing is definitely settled yet in regard to the proposed race between Yale and Cambridge, England. Yale has written to Captain Mullbury of the Cambridge crew but has received no answer...
...last number of the Advocate is by far the most readable since the '90 board took charge of the paper. All of the articles are short, and most of them bright and entertaining. The first editorial discusses the new regulation in regard to registration. After condemning this rule as a possible "sop to Cerberus," the leader closes as follows: "We admit the principle of the resolution is indisputably correct, but we protest against it as rank injustice unless it be accompanied by longer recesses." The system of special reports is next criticised as "carried greatly to excess," so that many...
...reports which have appeared in several of the papers in regard to the injuries of Jesse Dann, '88, S, Yale's great catcher, are partly true. He is suffering from a double curvature of the spine, and although not confined to his bed, can only take moderate exercise, and will be obliged to wear a heavy leather jacket for a year, at the end of which time his physicians hope he will have entirely recovered. He has been obliged to give up ball playing entirely...