Word: ends
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...Amherst Student complains that the second Yale game was thrown away by their team. They asked to have the game called at the end of the seventh inning in order to catch a train although the prospects of their winning were very favorable...
...leaving Groton, one's attention is immediately attracted by the huge grand stand on the New London side of the river, which is built directly opposite the finish of the course. As only the end of the race can be seen from the stand, various methods are employed to keep the spectators informed about the progress of races from the very start. In the first place, there is a little telegraph office adjoining, through which a constant communication is kept up between the start and each separate half mile flag, and these messages are posted directly in front...
...take great pleasure in commending the manager of the freshman nine, who by his diligence and care, has brought the nine out so well financially, as to have quite a surplus at the end of the season. In these times, when we hear so much about "debts of several hundred - or several thousand - dollars," left by treasurers and managers of various college societies and associations for their successors to pay, it is a pleasure to meet with such a thorough, conscientious manager as Mr. Woodbury. He has not only paid up all the expenses of the nine...
...this stamp to bring companions in with them is only of too frequent occurrence. There is no need of remarking about the kind of women who are permitted to be present in the yard; to say that there is too great a jostling of Beacon Hill and the South End, is sufficient. This sort of thing ought to be stopped completely and at once, if it has to be done by making each man personally responsible for the uses he puts his tickets...
...while differing materially from ordinary undergraduate work, shows that real thought is among us, and that such thought can be clearly stated. But Mr. Santayana's sonnet, again, is not equal to his usual work. Many of the lines are strong, but the strength is hardly carried to the end. "A Study in Catullus," by Mr. H. G. Bruce, is probably, from an artistic point of view, the best piece of student literary work which has been published at Harvard for years. While there is evident a tendency to pedantic allusion and a fondness for a Macaulay-like form...