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Word: offering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...changes appearing this year, the addition of a home game with the University of Virginia is a popular move. Our relations with this southern college through the baseball team have been very cordial, and to entertain its team in Cambridge will offer opportunity for a return of hospitalities. The omission of the trip to Ithaca will benefit the men on the nine, even though our relations with Cornell are thus made less intimate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BASEBALL SCHEDULE. | 12/15/1909 | See Source »

...produced until the Dramatic Club took it up this fall. Mr. Harris was present at the first presentation of the piece by the Dramatic Club last Tuesday and liked it so much that he had Mr. Selwyn see it on Thursday. As a result an offer to produce the play professionally was made to Mr. MacKaye, and accepted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New York to See "The Scarecrow" | 12/13/1909 | See Source »

This year we are neither optimistic nor pessimistic. There will be no excuses to offer at the end of the season, and the better team will win, but the Harvard team will be the best on the field that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Captain Fish Spoke at Mass Meeting | 11/12/1909 | See Source »

...wishes to try for Honors in Literature must present a program of courses and subjects for the approval of the Chairman of the Committee on Honors in Literature not later than the end of his Junior year. These honors are awarded at graduation. Their purpose is two-fold: to offer a plan, supplementary to the existing schemes for honors, that will encourage undergraduates to combine reading in the Classics with reading in the Modern Languages, and to offer students an opportunity to count private reading as well as work done in connection with courses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Honors in Literature Requirements | 11/10/1909 | See Source »

These are but instances of methods which might well be adopted for handling the much larger crowds that come to games in the Stadium. To those who live in this community information bureaus, ticket offices, and ushers in greater number than we are accustomed to would offer no additional pleasure in the games, but to the many who come as comparative strangers to Cambridge such minor details would bring much additional enjoyment. West Point has a large squad of enlisted men available for this sort of service; but the Harvard management would have no difficulty in securing a corps...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CARING FOR FOOTBALL CROWDS. | 11/3/1909 | See Source »

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