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...Freshman lacrosse team defeated the Brooklyn Boy's High School in a one-sided game Saturday afternoon by the score of 9 to 0. Nightingale and Lucas played well for 1915 and the team as a whole showed much improvement. HARVARE 1915. BROOKLYN. Schroeder, g. g., Koster Little, p. i.h., Copper Kelley, Robinson, c.p. o.h., Bergstrom Rossbach, 1d. 1a., Quenz Catton, 2d. 2a., Marshall Wilder, 3d. 3a., Campbell Wood, Merriam, c. c., Gove Wiener, Schulman, 3a. 3d., Burroughs, Comiskey Nightingale, 2a. 2d., Holloran Lucas, 1a. 1d., Cusack J. Fleming, o.h. c.p., Hollman C. Fleming, i.h. p., Mallory

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman Lacrosse Team Won | 5/20/1912 | See Source »

...captain of the latter aggregation, with the midnight oil oozing from his brow, and a worried look on his face because the boy's weren't working nice, had nothing to say yesterday afternoon. He did say that the CRIMSON representative might go on along and get out of his way because how could he hit grounders with the CRIMSON representative in front of home and give the fellers some practice and gosh knows they need it. It is rumored that Lowell, a dark horse, is a tower of strength on the mound, and has a grand cross-fire...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Phi Beta Kappa vs. Crimson | 5/3/1912 | See Source »

...verse, I prefer Rollo Britten's "The Little Boy at the Sea Shore," with its suggestion of Blake to the Swinburne Poe-Henley grimness of "Faith Lies Sick." Arthur Wilson's "By a Window" contains one epithet which justifies it. I do not believe that Schofield Thayer's "Amica" exists in his imagination, much less in his experience; she is only a creature of his vocabulary. J. D. Adams's "The Greater Sunlight" conveys to me neither image nor idea nor emotion. The use of the word "lambent" should be forbidden to Monthly poets for the space of one year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CURRENT MONTHLY REVIEW | 4/10/1912 | See Source »

...among those who are also graduates of the college, eighty-six had come from private schools and 133 from the public schools. Presumably this represents the contrasting school groups which figured in the earlier test. At all events, what is the conclusion from these figures? It appears that one boy in every six of the private school obtained an honor degree in the law school, whereas only one in thirteen of those who had prepared for the college in public schools was equally successful...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHERE THE BEST SCHOLARS GO. | 3/20/1912 | See Source »

...view. For the College it is essential, for even in New England Harvard does not occupy the obvious pre-eminence among the college-going classes that it once did, largely because the college-going class has so enlarged itself in the last twenty-five years. Nowadays great numbers of boys work their way through college, and many of them do not know of the many chances of earning money at Harvard. For the boys themselves it is highly desirable that all colleges shall put their respective advantages before the schools, so that any given boy can have full information before...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOCAL HARVARD CLUBS SHOULD SPREAD INFORMATION | 3/9/1912 | See Source »

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