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...nineteen, all working actively for the college. In 1879, twenty-eight states and territories, and three foreign countries were represented among the students, while in 1889, thirty-five states and territories, and eight foreign countries were represented. Each class now on its decennial reunion leaves in the college some record of its existence. Seventy-six has given $1000, the yearly interest of which forms a prize for which representatives of the four classes compete in debate on February 22d. Seventy-seven presented the Biological laboratory; Seventy-eight founded a university lectureship; and Seventy-nine erected in the college chapel...
During the holidays the Boston Record published a series of interviews with Harvard graduates on the much discussed and well-worn topic, "What is the matter with Harvard in athletics...
...Yale or Harvard. We leave it to you and to the public to judge from the evidence presented in 1 and 2 above whether or not she can justly be thought to have yielded to them this autumn in the constitution of her Football team. She is certainly on record as having opposed the passage of the rules aimed at their suppression, which were proposed in the convention held on Nov. 4. She alone voted against them, and the captain of her team is reported by the delegate of the Yale team to have said as he left the convention...
...past season. The result was she put into the field the best team she has ever had, and made a better showing than she has ever made before-this with an unbroken line of defeats in the past for encouragement. In other branches of athletics she has a better record to encourage her. There seems to us no reason, therefore, why she should not do as well in these as she has ever done before. The first requisite of such an athletic future is a wholesouled enthusiasm like that which we have already seen this college year in football...
...have their choice of wools.- Speech of Mr. Morse. H. of Rep., July 12. 1888; speech of Mr. Springer, H. of Rep., July 19, 1888. (2) The actual expense of producing woolens is, in general, excluding cost of raw wool cheaper in the United States than in Europe-Congressional Record XIX 6198-9. (3) Including the cost of raw wool however, the expense of producing woolens is cheaper in Europe than in the United States.- Ibid...