Word: result
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Willis Clark, of Boston, has been engaged by the college to give the students instruction in music. One evening in every week will be devoted to this purpose, and the plan promises to result very successfully...
...evidently was not clearly understood where the bond was to be deposited, nor before what hour it was to be made out, so as a result the gangways were taken away and the floats put in readiness to be hauled up before the bond was made out. In past years when the float has been left down it has been at the request of the 'Varsity crew, who have furnished a bond on their surplus, but as the '90 crew had to get their bond from another source, it could not be obtained in time to do any good...
Owing to an unfortunate misunderstanding, the float at the boat-house has been taken up. As a result the members of the junior class crew will be unable to practice on the river during the early part of the coming month as they had hoped. It seems to us that in the future it would be policy to leave the float alone until an order comes from the captain of the 'Varsity crew to take it away, and if any class crew desired to use the float when there was danger of its being carried...
Very naturally, football is at present the most engrossing topic in college circles, and the result of the Harvard Princeton game is awaited with a degree of interest second only to that you yourselves feel. A number of accidents has kept our eleven in an uncertain state as regards its composition; Gill '89 and Rhodes '91 are just recovering from sprains, while Woodruff '89 did not begin training with the team until the first of this week. The half-backs are not chosen yet and probably will not be until the Princeton game. The work of the freshman team...
...never intended as an agreement binding the college: but even if it was, the later action of the two colleges, agreeing unconditionally to play in New York, would have annulled it. If Harvard persists in her demand there will be no game and the responsibility for the result rest solely on her shoulders...