Word: tell
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...skyward and has failed, though the Great Tower at the corner was blown up. The tooth of time has gnawed unceasingly, yet not all ungently, upon the ruin. From that gaping window Elizabeth of England looked out many a time; that octagon tower and the dungeons beneath it could tell strange tales, if they chose; kings and princes have supped and made merry in those halls, and many a tender vow has been plighted in the moonlight on that great stone promenade. But the crimson glory which shines, as their glory shone, is fading already, as their glory faded...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - To tell the all absorbing thought in the mind of the Princeton undergraduate at present, suffice it to say that last Saturday afternoon saw their foot-ball teams leave on one train to play in divers places. Three victories were scored: the 'varsity beat University of Pennsylvania, 59 to 9, the sophomores made 15 points to Chester's 0, and the freshmen won from the Lafayette freshmen by 18 to 0. The 'varsity has played four games and in no two of them have the same team played. The second Stevens game was especially disastrous, both...
...been greeted with general satisfaction by the students. The constant and hard worker will sigh a mighty sigh of relief when his eyes light on these lines, and the constitutional fainant will smile with lurid joy at finding the period of his loafing so largely extended. He will even tell you that the vacation ought to last until Wednesday morning at nine o'clock. However, it is to be hoped that the proverbial spirit of indifference, which by some calumniators is said to prevade the minds of Harvard men will not become so far triumphant that a large number...
...class above all others should feel called upon to make it a subject of study. All old institutions possess readable histories, and Harvard is no exception. Upon an occasion like the approaching anniversary it would seem strange to a visitor that not one perhaps in a hundred students could tell him the name of the first president of his college, and not one in five hundred could tell him the occasion of the university's foundation. It is true, as the librarian says, that all the histories of Harvard have been taken out of the library...
...college annals and is a forecast of the revival of interest in Cambridge of this good old English game. We congratulate the men of the eleven on their success, feeling that perhaps it is to them that we will hereafter look with pride and satisfaction, for who can tell but that our ascendancy in athletics may not be regained through our possession of the champion Cricket team of the United States...