Word: successful
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...victory falls to us there can remain but little doubt as to the result of the struggle for the pennant. Our track athletes will endeavor to retain the Mott Haven Cup which has been so long in our possession as to seem almost like a fixture. Of our success in this endeavor there can be but little question. The steady and faithful work of the past winter cannot fail to meet its proper reward. Of the third event in which the college is concerned, but little remains to be said. The freshman championship has been held so long...
...good club here this year, and have been practising constantly for several months. Not only is the club good individually, but it will be assisted by the '88 members of the Pierian who form so large and able a part of that body. That the concert will be a success, we have not the slightest doubt; and the smallness of price of admission, and the laudable object for which the concert is given, should combine to make every member of the class attend...
...tedious two hours that the game lasted, we are led, in all kindness and good will, to offer a few suggestions. Now we offer our advice simply because we think that the team is capable of improving its play by following it, and because we cannot believe that success is to be attained unless improvement is made in the points mentioned. First, then, the tendency to look after the ball when it is hit, instead of starting for first base, at once, and at full speed, must be overcome. In the next place the players, when on base, must watch...
...President. And President Eliot has by this public action shown that he fully shares in the sympathy with the students which the professors have shown. Every freshman should be led to consider carefully the selection of studies which he makes, and each year ought to see the ultimate success of the elective system more assured through a wise choice of studies...
...stage of a Greek theatre in the time of Sophocles. Next Monday evening the Shakspere Club will upon it undertake a task which is second in its difficulty only to the representation of Oedipus Tyrannus. Great labor has been expended upon the stage fittings of the play, and if success is deserved by hard and conscientious work the Shakspere Club need not fear for the success of their great venture. The peculiar formation of the stage in Sanders was found to be a great drawback to an easy utilization of the entire space, and it was only by employing...