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Word: yet (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...Grant M. S., who was absent last winter, but still has one more year to represent Harvard according to the intercollegiate rules. Although he injured his ankle last spring, he has since run one-mile and five-mile races in his best form. It is too early yet to make any estimate concerning the Freshman candidates for the track team, but there seems to be some very promising material, especially among the distance men. There are a good many men now with the Freshman football squad who will later try for the weights...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fall Track Work. | 10/4/1899 | See Source »

President Eliot, who spoke first, said in part: The men who have come here for the first time have joined a body of men, twenty thousand strong, some living, some dead, but all making themselves equally heard. Yet in joining the College, they incidentally become members of one of its smaller groups; in fact the group, in the choice of subjects, rather than the particular class joined, is largely to determine the kind of men with whom they become most intimate. By this principle of subdivision the large college is distinguished from the small college. President Garfield once remarked that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RECEPTION TO NEW STUDENTS. | 10/4/1899 | See Source »

...Faculty, at an early meeting, will nominate candidates for appointment to certain graduate scholarships which have become vacant, and to four of the newly established Austin Scholarships for Teachers, which have not yet been filled. Graduate students who wish to be considered as applicants for any of these appointments are requested (unless they have presented applications since July 1) to give immediate notice to the Committee on Fellowships. Unsuccessful candidates in the assignment of last spring should renew their applications, if they have not already done so. New applications should be made on a blank form provided for the purpose...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Graduate School Scholarships. | 9/30/1899 | See Source »

There are still, of course, many individual faults, which the practice or the coming weeks is sure to minimize. Yet nearly all the players have been picking up, little by little, those finer points which are not usually displayed until later. That cannot help being the case, however, for the competition is so close that two or three men could be found to fill with credit almost any position. Only in the centre is there a certain weakness. But the appearance yesterday in the play of A. R. Sargent will do something toward strengthening that part of the line...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FIRST GAME | 9/30/1899 | See Source »

Burnett played centre on the second eleven and seemed well able to hold his own with Sargent. Ellis did some brilliant rushing for the substitutes. The tackles on the first eleven, Swain and Eaton, are not up to form yet. Both men play too high...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YESTERDAY'S FOOTBALL | 9/29/1899 | See Source »

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