Word: nathan
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Horizontal bar.--H. F. Ballantine '15, W. Campbell '16, M. F. Gates '15 (captain). Side horse.--W. Campbell '16, M. F. Gates '15, S. Hall '16. Club swinging.--R. G. Nathan '16, P. M. Symonds '15. Parallel bars.--H. F. Ballantine '15, W. Campbell '16, M. F. Gates '15. Flying rings.--D. G. Nutter '16, A. K. Hobby '15, M. F. Gates '15. Tumbling.--A. K. Hobby '15, R. G. McPhail '15. The judges of the meet will be Mr. Hugo Seikel, Mr. Oliver Hebbert, Mr. Christian Eberhard, and Mr. Carl Schrader...
...Sever 23 Mathematics 13, Holden Mineralogy 12, Mineral Lab. Music 5 hf. Holden Philosophy 9, Beazley to Kinton (inclusive), Emerson A Lane to Wells (inclusive), Emerson F Philosophy A 7, Andover Psychology 6, Sever 5 Scandinavian 1, Sever 5 2 P. M. Comparative Literature 12, Allison to Nathan (inclusive), Emerson D Packard to Zehner (inclusive), Emerson J Graduate School of Applied Science. Engineering 11K, Pierce...
...smothered in local color, and his hero's coat is "of the same goods" as his trou sers. Mr. B. Winkelman, in a sketch reeking of the odors of Memorial and Randall, tells with some pathos but no distinction a fanciful incident of College life. Finally, Mr. R. G. Nathan contributes a vigorous bit of verse in his "Song of the Mountaineers", and an unconscious parody of the weaker elements in Mr. Galsworthy's style in his "Appreciation" of that writer's recent volume of essays...
...John A. Sullivan, h.'11, chairman of the Boston Finance Commission, on Municipal Administration; Hon. Nathan Mathews '75, former Mayor of Boston, on City Charters; Mr. Stephen O'Meara, Police Commissioner of Boston, on Municipal Police Administration; Mr. David A. Ellis '94, former chairman of the Boston School Committee, on Municipal School Administration; and Mr. Francis R. Bangs '91, former Alderman, on the Financing of Municipal Improvements...
...germs of Red Blood and Sex have luckily spread no further. Mr. Pichel's story about "Miss Clearwater's Morals" threatens to lead us into the literary red-light district, but turns out to be only a clever conversational sketch, strained and obscure in places, but entertaining throughout. Mr. Nathan, in going from drama to verse, leaves sex subjects and gives us poetry of real descriptive power and contageous feeling. Mr. Skinner and Mr. Selders both contribution sensible articles of protest: Mr. Skinner against the misleading rhetoric of those who preach "progress" and care not whether they are progressing...