Word: wording
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...winners in Harvard-Yale debates will be taken on Monday, May 14, at 1.30 p. m. The following will please be at Pach's studio at that time: Duniway, Hutton, Douglas, Prescott. Apsey, Hayes, Vrooman, Warren, Stone, Lakin, Dallinger, McLaughlin. If anybody can not keep this engagement, please send word to 30 Stoughton before...
...strong point if the 'varsity nine here were to be confined indoors two weeks longer each year than their chief rivals, but on this point testimony differs. Holmes Field can never be played upon until late, but the case with Soldiers Field will probably be different. We have the word of a member of the athletic committee, the chairman of the sub-committee on grounds and buildings, that he personally visited Soldiers and Jarvis Fields this year three weeks before the April recess, examined both, and was of opinion that Soldiers was the drier. Such being the fact, the strongest...
...discovery was announced every sect, Baptist, Unitarian, Episcopalian, and all the others were sure that it was going to show that they were following in the steps of the fathers and that the others were all wrong. When the manuscript was translated and printed, no one had a word to say. As might have been expected, the arrangements would not now be practicable. So we now study church history as history and not as a model. What we do study as church history is only a record of the events of the church, but to make the study...
...present to arrange a race with the Harvard-Yale winner, provided the American crew would assume the challenge. "Bob" Cook, Yale's sagacious adviser in rowing matters, in commenting on this proposition, says, "This socalled official message from Oxford cannot be taken notice of by Yale until direct word is received from Oxford. This delegation of authority to a third party was made at a banquet in celebration of the Oxford victory. There is an enthusiastic atmosphere enveloping such occasions which is rather unfavorable to official utteranes and I should prefer to see a communication from the Oxford rowing...
...word was given at three minutes past six. '94 got the best of the start, but '96 was rapidly gaining and would have passed them in a few more strokes when they were called back by the referee's whistle. No. 7 in the junior boat had jumped his slide and a fresh start was taken. This time the three crews shot out as one boat, and remained together to the quarter mile mark. Here '95 dropped the stroke to 30 per minute, while '94 and '96 kept steadily at it, the first rowing 36 and the latter 34 strokes...