Word: sixteener
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...Weld Boat Club will enter three crews in the Metropolitan regatta to be held June 17 in the Charles river basin. The club will make a new departure by entering a junior eight. Sixteen men were called out by Coach Donovan, and, after a few days preliminary work in four-oars and in the freshman barge, a crew was put into one of the 'varsity shells. For the past three days the crew has been rowing as follows: Stroke, Magrath; 7, Addison; 6, Thomson; 5, Youngman (capt.); 4, Stevens; 3, Delaney; 2, Fay (McKelleget); bow, Smith...
Three or four steps from the vestibule at the entrance is a mosaic-tiled landing. A door to the left leads to another vestibule, which in turn has a door leading to the dean's room. The dean's room is about sixteen feet square, and it is fitted up in hard wood. From the landing already mentioned are four doors, leading to as many rooms, which are about twelve feet square. These are to be used by the professors. Two or three steps more lead to another and longer landing hall. This leads to two recitation rooms. They...
...University Magazine. The club was incorporated in 1894, the President of the Columbia Glee Club being elected President. The membership is limited to sixty active members, who are either college graduates or students of at least one year and members of their college organizations. Of the present active members sixteen are Columbia men, ten Princeton, nine Yale, three Harvard, three Amherst and the balance from other well-known colleges. Among the associate members are President Low, Frederic R. Coudert, Julien T. Davis and Nicholas Fish, of Columbia; Chauncey M. Depew and Judge Howland, of Yale; Joseph H. Choate and Edward...
...Sixteen men, composing the gymnastic team of the University of Pennsylvania, started yesterday on a tour through the western part of the state. They will give exhibitions in five different cities...
Everybody in Boston knows George W. Wilson, that inimitable comedian who for sixteen years was a prime favorite in the old Museum stock company, and it seems as if everybody and their cousins were out to see him appear once more on the stage where he has made so many successes in the past. Little need be said about the play. It is sufficient to recall the fact that it is one of those bright, farce comedies, of the same class as "Charley's Aunt" and "The Private Secretary," which are put together for laughing purposes only. With one exception...