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With the Princeton game but a week distant, it is probable that Coach Fisher will save his men as much as possible by frequent substitutions. In the early games this fall the visitors have shown no great strength, and should find it difficult to stop the Crimson today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FINAL PRELIMINARY GAME THIS AFTERNOON | 11/1/1919 | See Source »

During the week the 1923 team has had hard workouts in preparation for today's game. On Wednesday afternoon they were given a stiff practice scrimmage against the University team. Blackboard talks by Coach Withington have been frequent. Chapin will not be able to play today because of an injury to his arm, and his place will be taken by L. P. Brown. The Freshman line-up follows: De Jonge, r.e.; Kunhardt, r.t.; Reynolds, r.g.; Clark, c.; Wood, l.g.; Ladd, l.t.; Hartley, l.e.; Buell, q.b.; Churchill, r.h.b.; Brown, l.h.b.; Owen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN CLASH WITH EXETER | 10/25/1919 | See Source »

...held in the Stadium since 1916, the University eleven smeared the victors over Bates College by the score of 53 to 0 Saturday afternoon. Although the Maine aggregation put up a game fight they could do nothing against the heavier, more experienced players of the Crimson team. Except for frequent fumbling the game was marked by few early-season blunders. E. L. Casey, Occ., started by his clever runs through a broken field, once for 45 yards and again for 65. W. J. Murray, Occ., by his field-generalship and rushing work, and R. Horween, Occ., by his line plunges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ELEVEN CRUSHES BATES IN ONE-SIDED CONTEST | 9/29/1919 | See Source »

...only place where members of the Faculty could dine together or invite students to dine with them. Some few professors have entertained members of their classes in their homes, and some have had afternoons and evenings when they would welcome callers. But there has been a general lack of frequent intercourse between student and instructor, doubtless due in part to the indifference of some undergraduates, but also due to an unintentional lack of interest on the part of busy professors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HIGH TABLE. | 9/26/1919 | See Source »

...LaFarge writes "To Frederic Schenck". The value of the poem is in the feeling it expresses toward its subject; a value marred only by the frequent lapses in word or phrase from the exalted to the mediocre. Possibly a simpler form might have left the evident sincerity of the work freer to be felt, but as it stands we may be grateful for the poem. The same difficulty with external form bothers the author of "Ghosts", and the reader is jolted out of whatever enjoyment he might derive from this treatment of an old theme. "The Gallows Thing...

Author: By K. B. Murdock ., | Title: MURDOCK PRAISES ADVOCATE | 5/9/1919 | See Source »

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