Word: cooperativeness
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...very well individually. The Canadians excelled in team work and their passing was straighter than Harvard's. They played a clean game and there was no unnecessary roughness. For Harvard the best playing was done by Beecher and Leighton. Sand, Ring and Horne also did well. For Toronto, Kingston, Cooper and Snell did best. The make-up of the teams...
First came the Seniors, dressed in long red gowns with black Oxford caps. They had with them on a dray, a model of the Harvard statue, supported by burlesque personations of a butcher, a cooper, and a grocer, in allusion to the father and two step-fathers of John Harvard, who left their little fortunes to his mother, whence the property passed to him to endow finally the infant college. The group was labelled "Johnnie Harvard's Pas." The Seniors carried also a transparency worded as follows: "We are the oldest living graduates...
English 6-J. T. Cooper, W. P. Dutton, E. M. Grossman, S. Heckscher, A. S. Ingalls, A. M. Kales, G. L. Paine, F. D. Pollak, T. H. Russell, A. C. Train, J. P. Warren, T. S. Williams, C. R. Wilson...
West Virginia-J. T. Cooper Gr., chairman, J. R. Trotter...
...should not be opposed by other European powers." After the principal disputants, H. E. Addison '96 and R. C. Davis '97, had spoken, the following candidates for admission to the Union spoke: W. E. Dorman '98, G. P. Drury '97, H. F. Robinson '98, L. L.Gillespie '98, J. T. Cooper 2 G., C. E. Bown '98, W. B. Buck 1 G., G. W. Abele '97, S. R. Wrightington '97, H. S. Smith '98, A. B. Cunningham...