Word: payson
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...Miss Louise Ross-Todd; Thaddeus Adamowski, Miss Elizabeth Cole; R. F. Brander, Miss Rosamond Murray; T. J. Curtis, Miss Eleanor Jackson; Theodore Drier, Miss Elizabeth Wentworth; John Edmonds, Miss Mary Wister; W. H. Forbes, Mary Hallowell; Sameul Hammond, Jr., Miss Alice Onderdonk; Donald Maxwell, Miss Theresa Winsor; W. L. Payson, Miss Jane Grew; J. H. A. Wilder, Miss Emily Thompson; O. J. Wister, Miss Helena Mitchell...
...MARSHALS Melville Pratt BakerJohn Crocker Myles Pierce Baker Mitchell Gratwick John Fiske Brown Jr. Richmond Keith Kane Richard Chute Edwin Clapp Lincoln Arthur Joseph Conlon Louis Butler McCagg Jr. FOR TREASURER Charles William Baker Jr. Haven Parker Richard Robertson Higgins Henry Stuart Payson Rowe FOR IVY ORATOR Joseph Alger Jr. Huntington Brown FOR CHORISTER Howard Elliott Jr. Arthur Aylmer Fish Jr. Alexander Lang Steinert FOR POET Harry Kay Behn Jr. Burke Boyce William Whitman 3rd FOR ODIST Walter Tembaron Prendergast William Ellery Sedgwick Jr. FOR ORATOR Benjamin Franklin Jones Jr. Edward Augustus Weeks...
There are three new men in Yale's' first shell since her defeat at the hands of Penn. Cowles has come up to 3, displacing Haldeman; Payson, who was shifted to Martin's place at 4 last week, has just exchanged places with Captain Hord, and is now rowing at 6; and, most important of all, Leslie, who stroked the victorious Junior crew against Penn, has taken the stroke oar in the first boat away from Hemingway. Only four men will row today as they sat in the shell on April 16. They are Whitney at bow, Carman...
There are snobs at Harvard and snobs at Yale, Oberlin and Lealand Stanford. There are prigs everywhere. The young gentleman in my story--"That sort of Woman"--which you have apparently done me the compliment to read--"Payson Clifford, Jr."--was a Harvard prig, but in the end, all his underlying good qualities, you will have observed, came to the top and he proved to be a regular fellow after all. He is not generic but he is--isn't he?--not exactly uncommon. Let us be honest. "Harvard Indifference" is at once the virtue upon which we pride ourselves...
There are snobs at Harvard and snobs at Yale, Oberlin and Lealand Stanford. There are prigs everywhere. The young gentleman in my story--"That sort of Woman"--which you have apparently done me the compliment to read--"Payson Clifford, Jr."--was a Harvard prig, but in the end, all his underlying good qualities, you will have observed, came to the top and he proved to be a regular fellow after all. He is not generic but he is--isn't he?--not exactly uncommon. Let us be honest. "Harvard Indifference" is at once the virtue upon which we pride ourselves...