Word: boye
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This is the English system. It is an old one. It has taken a century no doubt to develop it. The boy begins in his school days under the eyes of a master who was athletic, in his days, and the eyes of his older schoolmates. He does this for pleasure; but if he finds no fun in it, he does it because he must. He will be punished if he doesn't, either by the scorn of his fellows or the kicks of the upperclassmen. He has his sport for five or six years until he loves...
...Brooks '08; "A Russian Jew on Christmas," by A. Davis '07; "A Study in Yellow," by G. A. Seabury '07; "On the Rhine," by C. W. Stalk '03; "The Travel Papers of Arminius, IV, Concerning Certain Varieties of Travelers, Mostly Disagreeable;" "Lancelot," by H. W. Bell '07; "The Boy Will," by R. E. Rogers '09; "Monotones," by R. M. Arkush '07; "Phantasmia," by J. H. Wheelock '08; "Personal Research," by D. Carb '09; "Seeing Dresden," by R. Altrocchi '08; Editorial...
...title. The real stage-business of the piece, the actual sophistry, like the killing in a Greek tragedy is done behind the scense; but that hardly concerns the critic, and the author has done cleverly what he set out to do. The writer of the account of school-boy incidents, "As Related by Mr. Reginald Richards," essays, not wholly without sucess, that spirit of virile and forceful juvenility which appeals to us all in "Tom Sawyer;" the fun, however, is meagre and the piece too young by several years; it belongs rather in the columns...
...middle of the field after running it back 15 yards. The University team was given five yards for Carlisle's interference with the centre, after which a triple pass carried the ball to Carlisle's 39-yard line. Two line rushes followed, but in the next play Little Boy secured the ball on an attempted forward pass...
...Charles A. Eastman of Amherst, Massachusetts, a full-blooded Sioux Indian, delivered a lecture in the Union last evening on "The Real Indian,"-speaking of his training, ideals, and philosophy of life. From his childhood, said Dr. Eastman, the Indian boy is taught to look up to the Great Mystery, to develop his body, to live a simple life, and to be daring and fearless, yet unselfish. The real Indian despised the great machinery of civilization, considering it a defacement of nature. He mourned equally for his friend and his enemy, and until he had been cheated by the English...