Word: bones
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...coach, and Walter Camp. But this inter-working continuity and ever-working salubrity was at length abandoned for the present restless, "fall once try something else" method. The result, only one victory over Harvard since 1910 and eight defeats, has been disappointing. Now the Bulldog is wondering where that bone is he buried some ten or fifteen years...
...announced that this year more attention is to be paid to specialty combinations than has been customary in previous years. With this end in view the management is calling especially for men who play the cornet or the from bone to play in the jazz band; for men who play saxaphones for the saxaphone quartet: and for a drummer for the Banjo Club. A quartet and a double quartet are also being organized and men are needed for these...
While deploring the present status of the drama in the universities, Mr. Eaton still clings to the higher institutions as the back-bone of the theatrical world of today. "In our colleges lies the future hope of the drama", he declared, and went on to dwell at length on the few evidences of a dramatic revival in American hails of learning. Foremost among these latter is the 47 Workshop at the University, given under the direction of Professor G. P. Baker '87. This is the pioneer course in dramatics among American colleges. Its object it not to study the drama...
...form of the sport had to be invented to roll the rocks down again. The spectators increased prodigiously in numbers. Railings were built along the cliff-tops, and places allotted on payment of a substantial sum. Tickets were soon at a premium; these, let me add, were the small bone chips which we have gathered in large numbers from the ruins. In time, the income from this source alone was sufficient to maintain the whole institution...
...Aquinca cometh from the foot hills, liveth not with us but runneth back and forth daily like a dog returning ever to a hidden bone. He hath no interest in us, and careth not what he may give but only what he may gain. He lacketh the gentler qualities of good breeding. His garments offendeth our eyes. He gaineth mental prowess only by long labour which we disdain. Wherefore is he here? His preparation was among persons of his own sort and now he cometh from them, intruding here amongst...