Word: markes
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...return to "professionals." Likely enough the students would learn their sports from the best teachers, as most people of sense do learn. There are few attainments of body or mind that have not to be taught the learner by persons more proficient than himself, and it places no mark of evil on the teacher that he be dubbed "professional" Englishmen have not suffered from their contact with professionals, without whom no cricket club of any importance in England exists. There is no tennis court without its professional "marker" in England or any other country, and that in a game distinctly...
Among the collegians who have made their mark on the diamond are Hutchinson of Yale, (Des Moines); Dwyer, of Hobert College, (Chicago); Garfield, of Oberlin, (Toledo); Bingham, of Harvard, (Easton); Turner, of Amherst, (Easton); Ray, of Maine State College, (Boston); Forrest Goodwin, of Colby, (Salem); Knowlton, of Harvard, (Salem and Easton); Viau, of Dartmouth, Cincinnati); Vinton, of Yale, (Lowell); Besset, of Brown, (Indianapolis); Stewart, of Amherst, (Troy). Ward and O'Rourke have both taken legal degrees at Yale and are full-fledged members...
...walk-over for W. N. Duane. The 220 yards dash closed the meeting. M. I. Motte had the pole, then came J. P. Lee, O. K. Hawes, J. Allen and T. S. Lee in the order given. T. S. Lee was set back a yard for going over the mark. J. P. Lee won the event in 24s, with O. K. Hawes second...
...Saturday afternoon, Chase, '91, the winner of the college tournament, played P. S. Sears, '89, for the championship. Sears outplayed his opponent, who was not up to his usual mark, and won easily by a score of 6-1, 6-1, 6-1. Sears, therefore, remains the college champion. The players were frequently hampered by a crowd of small boys who pressed closely upon the courts, though repeatedly told to keep back. It is a pity that the college authorities do not take more care to have strangers kept off the athletic grounds...
...services at Appleton Chapel last evening were conducted by the Rev. T. C. Williams of New York. Taking his text from Mark v: 9, he said that every man's character is many-sided, and composed of traits inherited from his ancestors. Many ways have been attempted to bring unity into life. The lowest of these is the impulse of selfpreservation, under which the passions balance one another. A different way is to suppress all intellectual and physical life and develop only the moral. Neither of these methods can, however, lead to unity, for this can only be found...