Word: sawed
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...decided to hold an inter-class race this afternoon at 3.30 p. m. All who saw the exciting team races of last winter will be glad to hear of this new departure in track athletics at Harvard. The men are all evenly matched and the result will be close and exciting. Each team will consist of four men. All the classes should turn out and cheer for their teams. John Cook will appoint a captain of each class and the teams will be picked from the following men who have been entered...
...juniors won the Yale class races at Lake Whitney on Saturday. Bob Cook, who saw the race, said they rowed his stroke exactly. The freshmen came in second. The varsity crew gave the junior crew two lengths handicap and beat them by only three feet; time, 6m. 59s. The single sculling race was won by H. W. Buck, '95; time...
...disappointing. They have played better ball, and we know they can play better ball now. Fortunately they have one more chance to meet Yale. Between now and then there must be an amount of hard work such as no freshman team has ever had to go through. They saw to-day what kind of a team Yale has. It is going to be a hard team to beat, but by untiring work it can be done, and must be done...
...Louis, Denver, and the University of Colorado at Boulder. Leaving Colorado he went directly to California. He spent about two weeks in San Francisco and around San Francisco Bay. Thence he went to Southern California, visiting Los Angeles, San Diego, Riverside, Redlands, and San Bernadino. At San Bernadino he saw the superintendent of schools, Alex. E. Fry, whose writings upon the teaching of geography are widely known. He then visited Mt. Wilson where Harvard once had an observatory. Afterwards he visited Lick Observatory and saw the fine equipment of Professor Holden. At Santa Cruz he saw some...
Then came Manfred, Tasso and several songs inspired by friendship for Shelley and his exile. In Venice were written Don Juan; then his dramas, none of them masterpieces, and the Vision of Justice, which caused great consternation. Don Juan is a picture of the world as Byron saw it; he had drunk the cup of pleasure and had found all vanitus vanitatum...