Word: exceptionality
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...side shall put it in his own touch-in-goal, under penalty of a safety touch." To Rule 7 add - "No sticky or greasy substance can be used on the person of the players" Rule 18 - "A player may throw or pass a ball in any direction except towards his opponents' goal." To Rule 33 - "If in three consecutive runs and downs a team shall not have advanced the ball five yards or lost ten, they must give it up to the opposite side at the spot where the fourth down is made. Consecutive means without leaving the hands...
...time to save a burning building. Our buildings are so constructed that there is always a powerful up-draft in each entry. Let a fire get under a good headway on the bottom floor and the entry will become a death-trap to those above. There is no escape except by jumping from the windows. Matthews has a fire ladder, but Thayer, the largest and highest building, has no means of escape, except the wooden fire ladders under the chapel, which are not long enough to reach the upper story. A fire, occurring in a building like Thayer during...
Members of the Co-operative Society will now find at Drury's a competent person in charge of the office and goods at all hours, from 8 A. M. to 8.30 P. M., except between 11.45 A. M. and 1 P. M. The society is already able, by means of its increasing membership list, to purchase or order most of its goods as cheap as any dealer. In some instances, even, on small orders, the cost is less than dealers have to pay unless they take large quantities. If those members who have second-hand books to sell will leave...
...Yale crew practises daily from 10 A. M. to 12 M., and from 2 to 5 P. M. The crew will probably be constituted as follows; no change is to be made except in case of accident or sickness: Stroke, H. T. Folsom; M. C. Storrs, 7; W. H. Hindman, 6; L. K. Hull, 5; N. T. Guernsey, 4; F. W. Rogers, 3; J. R. Parrott, 2; H. R. Flanders, 1; D. R. Plessner, coxswain, (85 pounds...
...will not detain you with an account of the uninteresting journey from Saug Centre to Boston, except to tell you that Mrs. Butterfield told me after the journey was over that she should never wear her black "alpaca" again to travel in. On their arrival in Boston they were met at the station by Mrs. De Sorosis and her niece Asphyxia, and escorted thence to the home of Mrs. De Sorosis at the South...