Word: use
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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ARTICLE I.Section 1. There shall be a Graduate Treasurer for all athletic associations (including freshman teams) that use the grounds or buildings of the university...
...Watertown and try for the team. The CRIMSON publishes notices of the days when the captain is going out with candidates and those days will come as often as possible; but if there is anyone who cannot get out at any of those times, he can use the range by applying to any officer of the club. Men who are used to shooting in the field are particularly wanted whether they have shot at the traps or not. We sincerely hope that a team can be taken to Springfield which will begin the day well by beating Yale...
...Yale and Harvard row very differently from the English crews. This difference is inevitable from the difference in English and American rigs. The Yale and Harvard crews are rigged practically alike. The characteristics of their rigging are the short stretchers, and slides as long as a man naturally can use and varying for each man. In England every stretcher is fixed at an angle of 45 degrees and the exact number of inches the crew can slide fixed by the coach. In the Oxford and Cambridge crews this is from 15 to 151/2 inches, and is exactly the same...
...library in Gore Hall is open Sundays during term-time from 1 till 5 o'clock for the use of members of the university only...
...volume of Shelley's poems in the Library of Harvard College," by George Edward Woodberry. This volume was given to the library by Mr. E. A. Silsbee, who had received it from an intimate friend of Shelley's, and was plainly a copybook and not intended for use in original composition. The object of Mr. Woodberry's notes is to place before students the variations between the MS text and Formau's edition, London, 1876. Appended to the article is a facsimile of the draft of "The Skylark." This number contains also the official records of the corporation from...