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Word: boned (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...promising men for next year is G. A. King '18, who placed fourth against Yale. R. W. Babcock '17 also did well at New Haven and should be in good form next fall. W. P. Whitehouse, 2nd, '17, did consistent work this year. Although he broke a bone in his foot coming down West Rock at New Haven, with proper care the injury will not slow him up next year. R. H. Davison '17, was handicapped by injuries this fall, but another season he should be able to repeat his good record in the 1914 Intercollegiates. R. C. Cook...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BANCROFT TO LEAD RUNNERS | 12/4/1915 | See Source »

...territory; but the opposing linesmen broke through on the next two plays and tackled the backs for eight and two-yard losses, and Felton was forced to punt. The game was marred by frequent injuries on both sides. Of the Freshman team Coolidge broke his leg, Canfield broke a bone in his ankle, and Flower had a muscle torn in his left thigh...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1919 ELEVEN DOWNED BY WORCESTER ACADEMY | 10/25/1915 | See Source »

...Porter Road, at 4.45 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The accident occurred as Tuckerman was running to catch a car in Harvard square. He was taken immediately to the Cambridge Relief Hospital on Prospect street, where he was found to have suffered a bad scalp wound, a broken collar bone and several broken ribs. His injuries though serious will not prove fatal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tuckerman Run Over by Automobile | 5/7/1915 | See Source »

...first transposes the "Madame Butterfly Motif" into the familiar key of Kipling's dialesticisms. The second is a highly colored trifle as frail as the "jewelled veil gossamer" that its writer mentions. The last is purposeless but inoffensive. Like so much modern verse, all of these compositions lack the bone and fibre of solid thought and poetic necessity. They leave the impression that their authors sat down and cried, "Lo, I must produce a poem," and then cudgelled their brains for a proper subject...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Advocate is Below Average | 4/10/1915 | See Source »

...matter of the army Mr. Ratcliffe said that conscription is dangerous in that it would almost certainly lead to disunion and the overthrow of the democracy which has been the back bone of England for so many years. Already an entirely new army of over one and one-half millions has been organized from volunteers in addition to the scant million previously under arms, and the war office in England has repeatedly expressed its satisfaction with the speed of recruiting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TALK ON ENGLISH SITUATION | 2/27/1915 | See Source »

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