Word: shared
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Glee Club easily defeated the Freshman Glee Club in a game of foot-ball by a score of 26 to 0. Leland played well for '91 and Lockwood and McLeod made good rushes for '90, and Faulkner and Leavitt tackled well. The freshmen received the lion's share of applause, for at the close of the game they not only were cheered by the victors but also cheered for themselves in a self-satisfied manner. Slocum, '90, refereed the game in a very satisfactory manner...
...compensation less powerful here than elsewhere? Cannot this be the reason why there is less performance? There is little here to make a man sacrifice his personal affairs and take up the cause of his college. He gains but little popularity if successful, but receives a due share of odium if he fails...
...there no way for the "powers that be" to remedy this difficulty? Although new lockers have been made, there is surely room for more. Even if they should be situated in an inconvenient place, they would certainly be better than none. It is next to impossible for two to share a locker. And, meanwhile, those who were not for tunate enough to secure any are in a measure deprived of the privileges of the gymnasium. The matter needs speedy attention...
...University than cricket. It is a shame that this game which has been acknowledged for centuries to be a gentleman's sport should be so wantonly overlooked here. Few men probably realize what the cricket eleven has done, or what it might do, if it received its share of support from the students. Beginning yearly with a few good cricketers the eleven is filled up with raw men who practice faithfully by themselves unnoticed and disregarded, and by the time the season is well begun, we have at least a fair cricket team, but with hardly an extra...
...these disadvantages, the eleven has no suitable ground to practice on, and is obliged to practice on a wretched bit of turf back of Divinity Hall. Now, why cannot cricket have its share in the admirable grounds owned by the University? Why cannot the team players set up their wickets in the upper end of Holmes Field, say two afternoons in the week. Such an arrangement would not interfere with the success of a single sport; certainly not at this time of the year. If this were possible, it would probably be the means of adding one more...