Word: chosen
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...captain of the Freshman lacrosse team, it was announced yesterday. Dunn prepared at Boston Latin School, where he played tackle on the football team and was elected president of his senior class. At the University, he is a member of the Flying Club. In the 1931 elections, Dunn was chosen a candidate for class president...
...Burlington, Vermont was elected President; Frederick Herman Gade '31 of New York City was elected Vice-President. William Raymond Driver '29 of Milton was elected Secretary; Lawrence Edward Mallinckrodt '30 of St. Louis was elected Treasurer. For the other offices, William Frost Mann '30, of Brookline was chosen Librarian; Bernard Davis Hanighen '30 of New York City leader of the Mandolin Club; Robert Murray Whittemore '31 of East Orange, N. J., leader of the Banjo Club; and Charles Mathews Underhill '31 of Scarsdale, N. Y., leader of the Vocal Club. The chairman of the specialty Division will be appointed later...
...possibility of a group of undergraduates turning to serious music was hooted down as futile, and even worse, as unfitting. Unpleasantness was bound to result; the self-imposed ostracism of the University Glee Club from the intercollegiate organization brought more accusations of snobbishness; but the ideal was chosen, the standard set, and for better or worse Doctor Davison led his group on its unique...
Springfield has a strong pitching corps, and while Johnston is favored to start today's game, it is not at all impossible that Beach will be given the call over his team-mate. If Beach should be chosen to carry the Springfield hurling assignment, Putnam will replace Steeves behind the bat. HARVARD SPRINGFIELD Burns, c.f. l.f., Williamson Chase, 2b. c.f., Duncan Donaghy, s.s. 1b., Wood Lord, c. s.s., Davis Prior, 1b. r.f., Misar Whitney, 3b. 2b., James Jones, r.f. 3b., Craig Hardie, l.f. c., Steeves Cutts, p. p., Johnston
...make advance announcement of their names unless shortly before the examination. But clearly it would not be fair to the Yale men to select the ten best papers out of much over a hundred at Harvard, and line them up against those of ten men who had been previously chosen at Yale. Conditions had to be made as uniform as the circumstances allowed...