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Word: stande (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Tickets for the Harvard-Yale basketball game tomorrow night have been put on sale at Leavitt's and at Brine's, at fifty cents each. They will also be on sale at the door before the game. In addition to the usual seats around the court a stand will be created at the south end of the Gymnasium for the accommodation of admission ticket holders. No reserved seats will be sold before the contest; but the entire balcony has been reserved for those who desire to pay a small additional sum after entering the building...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tickets for Basketball with Yale. | 2/27/1903 | See Source »

Tickets for the Harvard-Yale basketball game on Saturday night have been put on sale at Leavitt's and at Brine's, at fifty cents each. They will also be on sale at the door before the game. In addition to the usual seats around the court a stand will be erected at the south end of the Gymnasium for the accommodation of admission ticket holders. No reserved seats will be sold before the contest; but the balcony has been reserved and reserved tickets may be obtained on the night of the game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Basketball Tickets | 2/26/1903 | See Source »

...holds that the College is the very heart of the University and that out of the heart are the issues of life; and I write the more earnestly because I see some American universities pushing blindly out from under them the College props on which they stand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESIDENT'S REPORT. | 2/10/1903 | See Source »

...news stand will be opened today in the office of the Union by S. F. Alexander, proprietor of the stands in Memorial and Randall Halls. All the New York and Boston papers and the leading magazines will be on sale; a theatre, ticket agency will later be established. The stand will be open from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: News Stand in the Union. | 1/6/1903 | See Source »

Ballantine opened the debate for Harvard. We of the negative, he said, stand for the protection of life and property as strongly as do the affirmative. But we contend that the means for suppressing violence are already adequate, and that the new power which the affirmative propose to grant to the President would be both unnecessary and undesirable. As the law now stands the President has absolute power to put down all violence which infringes national law, and the States have power to suppress violence infringing State law alone, not only by calling out State troops, but by calling upon...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON WINS DEBATE. | 12/13/1902 | See Source »

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