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...Scroll and Keys-William I. Armstrong, Cleveland, O.; Charles T. Brooks, Salem, O.; Robert W. Hunting, jr., Hartford, Conn.; Samuel L. Smith, Cleveland, O.; John R. Galt, Newburg, N. Y.; Harry F. Noyes, Georgetown, Mass.; Leopold J. Francke, New York city; Henry J. Sage, Cincinnati, O.; Edward L. Parsons, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Henry E. Mason, Chicago, Ill.; James G. Rogers, Chicago, Ill.; Lewis S. Welch, Hartford, Conn.; George Coggill, New York city; Henry C. Atkins, Indianapolis, Ind.; Augustus H. Morse, New York city...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Society Elections. | 5/26/1888 | See Source »

...inscription, "1887 College Base-Ball League Championship, won by Yale." Underneath these words will be the player's name and his position on the team. The other flag will be of three colors, crimson, orange and blue, with the names Harvard, Princeton and Yale printed in a gold scroll. Above the name of each college will be number games won, and below the number of games lost, by that college...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Trophies for Yale's Nine. | 3/13/1888 | See Source »

...Christmas vacation is over and we come back once more to Cambridge and prepare to train for the mid-years. This is a time for making good resolutions, and the college could not do better than resolve to inscribe a complete set of athletic victories on the blank scroll of the new year, 1888. Our record for the past two years has been anything but enviable, and it is for the men who are now here to see to it that our college resumes the lofty position she held in '85, and once more reigns supreme in athletics. To accomplish...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/3/1888 | See Source »

...acts he unwittingly has given us facts of his existence, as is shown by the relics to be found everywhere on this continent. We can gain but little knowledge of the less civilized nations from the conscious sources. The muse of history was once portrayed with a scroll and pen. The modern Clio should be armed with a spade. The historian to day has to dig for his parts. The study of unconscious sources begins with buildings, vases, irons, etc., but it soon advances to the inscriptions on tombs, coins, obelisks. The purpose of these inscriptions was not historic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Emerton's Lecture. | 10/6/1887 | See Source »

...Dead-head family that has been represented in every generation (with the exception of one) at Yale, is about to build, at a cost of half a million, a new tomb decorated with magnificent scroll-work.-Exchange...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 10/3/1887 | See Source »

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