Word: cranes
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...Yale and Richards of Cornell. Both men are capable of 6 feet 4 inches in the high and over 22 feet in the broad jump. Worthington of Dartmouth, J. O. Johnstone '16, Bertolet of Pennsylvania, and Hampton of Yale should show up well in the broad-jump, while Crane of Pennsylvania and J. O. Johnstone '16 may place in the high-jump...
...following men will make the trip: R. Z. Crane '17, E. B. Flu '17, W. B. Snow '18, E. E. O'Neill '16, E. L. Black '16, G. F. Beal '16, G. F. Freer '18, L. V. Miller '18, H. H. Dampman '18, S. E. Nash '16, O. H. Persons '16, R. H. Franzen '17, H. F. Sullivan '17, J. L. Hubbard '18, and G. B. Hebb'17, Managers H. R. Anderson '16, and R. B. Johnson '17, and Coach Warwick...
...from the Price Greenleaf Fund to the following 27 students in the College, for the College year 1915-16: Gordon Willard Allport '19, Glenville High, Cleveland, O.; Paul Harvey Berryman '19, Lake View High, Chicago, Ill., and Lake Forest Academy, Ill.; David Samuel Bond '19, English High, Boston; Clarence Crane Brinton '19, Central High, Springfield; John Michael Connolly uC., College of the City of New York; Ben Bennett Corson '19, Bridgton High, Me., South Portland High, Me., and Gorham High, Me.; Harry Hyman Fein '19, English High, Boston; Harold George Fitzgerald '19, Lawrence High; Carlton Percy Fuller '19; Mansfield High...
...Fellowship (recently established at the Law School in memory of the late Dean Thayer) was awarded to Chester Alden McLain of Melrose for 1916-1917, and the Elizabeth Wilder Prize, which is offered to the Freshman passing the highest examination in German at Mid-Years, was awarded to Clarence Crane Brinton of Longmeadow...
...further away from life as most of us know it. There is a touch of the melodramatic in its treatment of Harvard existence which discourages those of us who have been brought up in the tradition that college men should write college stories. There are so few Flandraus! Mr. Crane chooses a graduate of "L--" College for hero, and though his plot is highly imaginative he succeeds in presenting a very much more convincing picture of the normal undergraduate state of mind. Mr. Courtney is sensational: he breaks away from his cherished George Ade tradition and gives us "A Romance...