Word: space
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...published this morning have been arranged with special reference to making the series as short and interesting as possible. It has been a common fault in former years that men have lost all interest in these games because the series have been dragged out over so long a space of time that it has become wearisome. This year the games will be finished about May 16 and, as cups are assured, there is no doubt that the series will be followed with more interest than usual...
...Johnson, a candidate for the sophomore crew, while assisting in carrying a pair-oar at the boat house yesterday afternoon stepped in the space between the platform and gangway, and hurt his leg and hand rather badly...
...president of the Athletic Association with regard to the practice of "passing" and "knocking up" ball in the neighborhood of the Jefferson Laboratory deserves all the publicity that can be given to it and we take this occasion of bringing it before the students. There is certainly enough open space at the disposition of players for them to carry on this exercise elsewhere than in the neighborhood of apparatus which may be damaged by stray balls. Moreover when the faculty has been so courteous as merely to call attention to the careless habit and leave the matter to be righted...
...Weld '60, has built and equipped a boat house such as has never been seen at Harvard before. There have been enough boats built to float fifty to seventy men at one time and there are two hundred lockers, two bath-rooms, a steam heated meeting room and space for an unlimited number of private boats. A fee of five dollars will be charged to each undergraduate to join the club and one dollar a year for the use of a locker. The undergraduates ought to take hold and make the thing a success. If two hundred and fifty...
...themselves as rather opposed to a dual league that I suspect the presence of a large class who believe in no league at all. I am so impressed by their arguments (which I think have not appeared in print) that I venture to ask a few lines of your space to recapitulate them in. Without any agreement or any red tape we have a league de facto. Whatever contests we undertake now will be simply matters of sport. The colleges will be (or ought to be) gentlemenly enough to conduct games like gentlemen: that is without professionals on their teams...