Word: evering
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...hard luck" may ever be given as a reason for defeat, it certainly was the cause of Harvard's defeat by Yale yesterday. The game was Harvard's up to the ninth inning, when two costly errors gave Yale three unearned runs and the game. The game was the most exciting played in Cambridge this year, and at the beginning of the ninth inning it looked as if there were hardly a possible chance of Yale's gaining the victory. The game was witnessed by one of the largest audiences that ever assembled on Jarvis, and the enthusiasm...
...pull eight miles each day, four miles in the morning at about ten o'clock, and four miles in the evening at about six o'clock. The crew is the heaviest that Yale ever put on the water, and, if 'beef' tells, and there's reason to believe that it does, they will not be very far behind Harvard at the finish. Among the members of the crew there is considerable confidence, more so in fact than is either necessary or good for them. The college at large is very non-committal on the subject, and no one seems...
...observatory, etc. His place of business is always in neat order, his show windows are usually attractive, and he is constantly striving to meet the demands of the people in the vicinity of Harvard square. Next autumn he will keep the largest stock of miscellaneous and text books ever brought to Cambridge, and these books will include books imported from England, France, Germany and other countries, and books of value by reason of their rarity or of their intrinsic value. On all text books his prices will be as low as any one can afford to sell them. The HARVARD...
...examination in Freshman Analytics yesterday has been declared by a former instructor in mathematics to be the hardest paper ever given in Harvard College. It is to be hoped that the faculty will be convinced by this and by last year's paper that analytics is a subject sufficiently difficult to be removed from the freshman year, and placed among the electives...
...whole of lower Massachusetts for the use of the reading room during the winter season is a momentous question, whose answer is very doubtful. Another and more serious objection to Massachusetts as the permanent quarters of the reading room is that readers are continually disturbed and inconvenienced by the ever-recurring examinations which are held there. This objection might be considerably obviated if the authorities would be so considerate as to hold examinations as much as possible in other places, and to use Massachusetts only during the mid-years and annuals. Whatever happens, however, we look to see the reading...