Word: use
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...field at Watertown used last spring by the Cricket club is not in fit condition for practice this autumn, and the use of new grounds has been secured through the kindness of the Cambridge Cricket club. These grounds are at the foot of Putnam Avenue just below Brookline street. The eleven will practice there until their last match at Lowell, Saturday, Oct, 19. The match scheduled for next Saturday with Pawtucket has been cancelled but an effort will be made to arrange a class game if enough candidates come out today and tomorrow...
...athletic organization making use of college buildings or grounds for match games, races or athletic contests, will be held responsible for the good order of participants and spectators, during the time of occupancy...
...member of the university on payment of a small fee, shall be able to take up rowing as a recreation. It is not primarily intended to be a feeder for the crews though good rowing material will undoubtedly be discovered through it. It is intended to extend the use of rowing as a pastime. Anyone who has seen at the English Universities thirty or forty boats of all descriptions, by thus used of an afternoon, by teachers and students, by the rich and the poor, will be pleased to think that rowing will soon be, not only the profession...
...Careful use of statistics show higher relative wages under a low tariff. (1) High wages in the United States are set by unprotected industries. Laughlin's note to Mill, p. 619. (2) Compare wages in protected industries in the United States and wages in those same industries in England-Report of J. G. Blaine, secretary of state, on the Button Goods Trade of the World, published by Department of State, Washington, June 25, 1881, (cited in Wells', Relation of the Tariff to Wages); Wells' Practical Economics, p. 143. (3) Wages in United States higher than abroad before there...
...property is placed in the hands of five trustees, graduates of Harvard and men interested in rowing, who intend to form a club of which any student in the university may become a member by paying a fee. The members, and members only, are to have free use of the boats. Enough boats. comprising eights, fours, pairs and singles are to be put in to accomodate seventy men. The object of the giver is to create an interest in rowing among men outside of the crews, so that the 'Varsity may have a larger field of practiced men to choose...