Word: lateraled
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...series of defeats has made it almost an assured thing that we will always lose the freshman game. Of course there are many reasons why the Yale freshmen defeat us annually. They commence playing early in the fall, and, as the weather in New Haven permits it, they play later. In the fall they also play in the class series, which is of great assistance. The nine is for the most part picked out in the fall. Again, in the spring they get on the field before we do. They also practice with the consolidated nine, which is an important...
...race of four miles is but a needless test of a man's endurance, and that no man can row that distance, spurred on by ambition and excitement and straining every muscle at each stroke, without some serious injury, which is sure to make itself apparent sooner or later. Such a strain on both nerves and muscles can not be without effect, as has been shown in many cases, during or immediately after the race. It is a well known fact that boating men are short-lived, due, undoubtedly, to the overexertion undergone in races of this length. While...
...picture is small but inimitable; little variety of color but strong and natural, - a sheep, a black one at that, covered up in a wealth of green grass. There is one of the earlier attempts of Van Marcke. It is not marked by that hard, firm finish which his later works possess...
...directors of the Dining Association have made a great mistake in setting the time for closing the hall so early as March 22. It will be almost impossible to secure one hundred boarders before that time, whereas, if they had assigned a later date, permitting men to return after the spring vacation, all might go well yet. There are many students who intend to return to Memorial after the recess, but they cannot leave their present boarding-house at such short notice as is made necessary by the board of directors. There is another class of men who would return...
...friend lives a mile or two away, and that, at the end of a year, she is acquainted with but four or five of her fellow-students, and one fears that she is losing irrevocably the school-girl good times that should be among the happiest memories of her later life. Nor does she have those advantages of Cambridge society, which, at first thought, we should expect from her residence in the rare old town. This, however, is but the inevitable separation of 'town and gown,' as wide in Cambridge as in Poughkeepsie. The world outside goes about its business...