Word: stande
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...game on bleachers without any backs to them is little short of barbarous, especially when it is perfectly possible and perfectly simple to have backs put on the seats. It may be a little trouble, and it will cost a little something, but these minor considerations ought not to stand in the way of the comfort of those who pay their money to see the game. And then it must be remembered that people are paying very much more this year than usual for their reserved seats. The management has taken advantage of the great demand for tickets...
...provide himself with a canvas jacket or something which cannot be torn from him. If he wants to wear a loose shirt in which to tuck his flowers, he can wear it outside his canvas jacket, but he ought certainly to wear something under his shirt which will stand rough usage. We are very glad to learn that the matter has come to the notice of the Class Day Committee, and that they are to send out a request to the men to wear canvas jackets or something of the sort at the Tree Exercises. The request ought...
...quiet and unselfish nature soon won him the regard and admiration of all his classmates: and to us who have learned to love him Harold Battelle will always stand as a noble example of sincerity, fortitude and hope...
...respectively out of a total of 78. Muir, with 13, was the only other player to score double figures. In Harvard's inning Garrett was stupidly run out, and Kaulbach had the same luck with the total at 6. S. Skinner and Dinsmore made a plucky stand for 14 apiece, but the side went out for 51. When the second inning began all of the 500 people present, with the exception of the Harvard team, had given the game to Haverford, for it seemed impossible to finish a second inning in the two hours remaining before the time to draw...
...clear type on smooth, white paper, and is in every way presented in a convenient and attractive form. The striking feature, of course, of the whole thing is the fact that it is the product of undergraduate work and this is destined to be an important factor in the stand which the book will take in public favor. However, the play as a whole, and especially the music, is intrinsically worth enough to insure a large circulation. It is sate to say that in the repertoire of the whistling public, which is very largely the musical public, such taking airs...