Word: rich
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Dates: during 1920-1920
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...every man. Just as the student is required to attend classes, so is he required to live for one year under conditions that make friendship with classmates easy, and foster class unity. The University wants to give this part of its education to poor men as well as to rich men, because a Harvard diploma implies more than so many examinations passed. It means that a graduate will have lived with his fellows in the dormitories and eaten with them in the dining halls as part of his education. For this reason no rule that holds together the Freshman Dormitory...
...Hoffman 2G. has been assigned as coach to the Smith Halls team; D. Marks 3L. to Standish; and F. W. Aldenderfer uL. to the Gore eleven. Coach Rich will have supervision of the entire series. Captains for the three line-ups have been appointed as follows: A. P. Hinckley, Smith; C. McVeagh, Standish; and W. A. Coolidge, Gore. The first game will be played Monday afternoon between Smith and Gore. All who intend to participate in the series should report that afternoon to the coaches on Soldiers Field. On Tuesday the winner of the first contest will meet Standish, while...
...second Freshman squad easily defeated Commerce High in an informal scrimmage. Coach Rich had a chance to try out all his material against the invading blue jersies, who crumpled before the Yearlings' offense. Despite fumbling and loose playing, the seconds piled up two touchdowns in the three-quarters of an hour scrimmage. Commerce showed little, though her backs got loose for several considerable gains...
...transplanting of Mr. Collier from the scenes of "Nothing but the Truth" and "Nothing but Lies" to the haunts of the idlest rich, busied only by bolshevist butlers and refractory race-horses offers the happiest medium for the Collierisms that kept the audience in one continuous chuckle from his first appearance to his last, and brought forth five minutes of sustained applause at the end of the second...
...wits, is popularly believed to be an adventuress. A combination of circumstances drives her to the wall--as the play progresses her true character is revealed little by little and we see her as a woman of high soul and pure heart. Finally she marries her old flame, the rich cynic, now turned sentimentalist...