Word: winning
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...their captain was severely felt, they could rise to the emergency, and every man has been playing with his whole heart and soul as well as with his mus cles and sinews. Great credit is due to each man on the team and if will and determination could win us the championship it would be ours without further trouble. But it must be remembered that Yale defeated Princeton on Saturday by the same score as that of the Harvard-Princeton game. And this was done under the same conditions of weather which surrounded us in our game with Pennsylvania...
...those not winning first or second prize who cover the distance in 1 h. 10 min. will receive cups. Only members of the Harvard Bicycle Club can receive prizes or cups. Men may join any time before the race. All contestants must meet at the gymnasium at 2.30 p. m. promptly. The finish will be near the Mt. Auburn bridge over railroad, a little after four. As every single man has announced his determination not to win a prize, but merely to go in for the fun of the thing, a lively race is anticipated...
...veteran rush line, as heavy, if not heavier, than our own, and that the game cannot possibly be won by the tactics which were used against Princeton. Nothing but the most earnest mental and physical efforts can bring us victory on Thanksgiving Day. Over-confidence alone can never win...
...class men practicing with the freshmen eleven, is a good one. There is no good reason why this custom should not be inaugurated here. Men do not seem to realize that a freshman team is one of the integral parts of our athletic system and that it has to win or lose like any other team. The success of the freshman should be the interest of the college at large, and '88, '89 and '90 should consider it their duty to see that nothing is left undone which might affect the result of the game with Yale...
Under this title, Mr. W. Goodrich Beal has brought together six original etchings of glimpses in and about Harvard Square. This is Mr. Beal's first publication. Indeed his name has hitherto been unknown, but this work has already received high praise from the Boston press, and deserves to win no small share of recognition. Perhaps the best of the etchings-certainly the most delicate and expressive one-is that of the old church-yard with the low tower of Christ Church amid the trees. It is full of the beauful air of repose which has endeared Gray's "Elegy...