Search Details

Word: till (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...Brooks may be found at Wadsworth house 1, every week-day from 9 till 10 a. m. 2. MONDAY...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 11/30/1889 | See Source »

...Museum of Comparative Zoology the Peabody Museum of Archaeology, and the Mineralogical Museum in Boylston Hall, are open to the public every week-day from 9 till...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 11/30/1889 | See Source »

...enter for the games of the Athletic association is expected to be examined a day or two before the meeting. If he desires to be examined earlier he finds himself barred out by the great number of men who have signed before him and he has consequently to wait till the last moment. Now in the course of a man's training he is obliged in his trial heats to exert himself almost as much as in the race itself. If therefore a man is in such condition physically that the races are dangerous to him, his previous training surely...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/29/1889 | See Source »

...everything was lovely-everybody was happy and cried, "The finest game of foot ball ever seen!" The second half, the sky clouds and lowers, the sun disappears the cannon ceases to boom, and the complaints of slugging, unfair play, and Ames resound and increase with Princeton's score, till at the close Princeton is pronounced a brute, a knave, a liar. The Princeton players were, heavier men and older men than Harvard and could stand a rough game of give-and-take longer. Was this Princeton's fault? Then, too, there is no dispute that they played a better game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Graduate's View of the Football Controversy. | 11/26/1889 | See Source »

...college when Princeton was the friend and Yale the enemy owe to Princeton our efforts for fair play and fair consideration, and I know that numbers of Harvard men are with me in condemning the action of the Harvard mass meeting as hasty and premature. Let us wait till the evidence is all in and sifted before casting off an old friend and falling into the arms of an old enemy. I earnestly hope that someone will reply to these inquiries and put us entirely in the wrong, but as a graduate of Harvard, a former member of university teams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Graduate's View of the Football Controversy. | 11/26/1889 | See Source »

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