Word: stande
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...CRIMSON has made arrangements for a direct wire from the press stand at the Harvard-Princeton game to the Union this afternoon. Over this wire bulletins will come at short intervals, and will announce the progress of the game play by play. The first report will arrive shortly after the game starts. As each report is received it will be given out verbally, and at the same time a diagram of the game as it progresses will be placed on a large blackboard...
...CRIMSON has made arrangements for a direct wire from the press stand at the Harvard-Princeton game to the Union tomorrow afternoon. Over this wire bulletins will come at short intervals, and will announce the progress of the game play by play. The first report will arrive shortly after the game starts. As each report is received it will be given out verbally, and at the same time a diagram of the game as it progresses will be placed upon a large blackboard...
...would be difficult to give a complete description of the excellent all-around work of the University team. For those who saw the game almost every member of the original eleven men and not a few of the substitutes stand out as participants in one or more exhibitions of the sort of football one likes to see. Perhaps the two most spectacular plays, Brown's brilliant scoring not excepted, were performed by Potter and Campbell, respectively. Recovering a fumble by Sprackling on Brown's 40-yard line, the Harvard halfback, aided by the sort of interference which continually defied...
...following men have been appointed ushers for the Brown game this afternoon. Men marked (A) stand at the bottom of the steps, men marked (B) at the first entrance, men marked (C) at the upper entrance, and men marked (D) at the top of the promenade. Men should be in their places at 1.45 o'clock sharp. If they are late, they will lose their place for the rest of the season. The assistant head usher will distribute badges to the men in their places...
Dean Castle finds the remedy of conditions as they stand in the appointment of younger instructors "who have gone through college with open eyes, receptive mind, and clean hands; who have appreciated temptations and withstood them--men, many of whom will not cling to teaching as a profession but who are eager to rectify in still younger men, the mistakes they themselves have made, and who are teachers because of their desire to be of service...