Word: whose
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...elected by the advisory committee, who shall also assign the referee for each championship game. The referee for the ball shall be chosen by the two captains of the opposing teams in each game, except in case of disagreement, the choice shall be referred to the advisory committee, whose decision shall be final. All referees shall be permanently elected and assigned on or before September 15 in each year, and proper provision shall be made in case of inability of referee to serve in case of accident, sickness or other like cause...
...their second innings the Freshmen made a much larger score, owing to the brilliant batting of Captain Brown, whose 55 was obtained by hard, clean hitting; Quinby and Captain Ellis distinguished themselves in the bowling line. Had time allowed, the Freshmen might have given the 'Varsity a very close fight for victory. Below is the score...
...iconoclastic spirit is a powerful one; we love to see the old gods dethroned and new ones set in their places. Mr. T. S. Perry has unearthed a new god in the person of Ebenezer Jones, for whose poems he wishes us to make a place, even if we have to thrust aside "some of his more successful rivals, who are admired simply because they happen to be the fashion." Mr. Perry is an eloquent and skillful advocate, but we must not forget that "fashion" in such matters is usually right: if it makes a favorite of one poet...
Since 1884 complete tables have not been compiled, but enough is known to show that while the total strength of the best developed student is not higher than the remarkable figure of 1884, there are among the students now in college no less than 200 whose total strength is higher than the best man in 1880, while the average in the whole university shows a great advance in development over that of 1880. This fact illustrates better than anything else that can be said the thoroughly satisfactory practical results of the system of adjusting exercise to individual needs. - Cambridge Tribune...
...above all notable in that they show in conspicuous colors the far-reaching threads that bind the college to every result of the past and every issue of the present; reading them, a conviction grows that every graduate present, or to be, is part of a great organization, whose vitality is unlimited and whose influence enormous...