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...hours, with ten minutes intermission between each half. The game was not marked by particularly brilliant work on either side. Harvard played with unexpected weakness at first, Ross of the Somervilles being allowed to capture three easy goals, before the Harvard defense seemed able to meet his system of attack play. For the Somervilles, Ross and Davis did by far the best playing. Most of the other men seemed inferior to their Harvard opponents. The game was won by the Somervilles by three goals thrown in short order by Ross during the first half, and by 1 goal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lacrosse. | 4/27/1885 | See Source »

...Harvard team was composed of the following men: Peabody, '87; Williams, '85, (captain); Gardner, '87, centre, Hood, '86; attack field, Henning, S. S., Nichols, L. S., Blodgett, '87, Noyes, '85, Twomply, L. S., Woods, '85; Goodale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lacrosse. | 4/27/1885 | See Source »

Under the title, "The Harvard experiment, especially the religious failure," Edward C. Towne of Cambridge, publishes in the New York Tribune a severe attack upon the state of religious thought at Harvard. The following extracts will show the tone of the article...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Attack on Harvard. | 4/18/1885 | See Source »

...trade has not made greater advances." In the United States, Russia and Germany, protection never flourished more than in the last twenty-five years. Americans are substantially protectionists to-day. Protection has grown. England's free trade policy was due to a search for cheaper food and a zealous attack against the aristocratic classes. Had the agitation been raised on any other grounds than those of cheaper food it is a question whether England would not yet have protection. England, however, is the exception. As a rule protection has been advancing, because, (1), of the fact that every...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Free Trade. | 4/15/1885 | See Source »

Your correspondent asks why we said nothing about others "whose tactics were precisely the same as those of the gentleman alluded to." If our purpose had been, as your correspondent asserts, to make a "violent personal attack" on any or all of the contestants, perhaps we should have mentioned the names of all those gentlemen who seemed to us to have passed over the bounds of scientific sparring into the province of "slugging." But as our criticism was directed towards the sparring itself, we mentioned only the name of the gentleman whose sparring would illustrate most clearly the objectionable features...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 3/31/1885 | See Source »

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