Word: choses
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...third time this year a Harvard team won an intercollegiate championship when the University hockey team scored a 3 to 2 victory over Yale in the St. Nicholas rink, New York, last night. After the game the two teams chose their captains for next year. A. F. Sortwell '14, of Wiscasset, Mc., being selected to lead the University players, and W. Beron '14S, being Yale's choice...
...Yale-Princeton game last Saturday, which ended in a remarkable 6 to 6 tie, was a splendid example of defensive football at its best. Neither team could gain consistently when within its opponents' 25-yard line and as a result both chose to try goals from the field rather than attempt to rush the ball across the line. Both teams played safe, few tricks or end formations being tried. Princeton absolutely abandoned the forward pass. Yale used the pass several times with but little success...
...chose for his subject "Intimations of Immortality in the Sonnets of Shakespeare." Immortality is divided into three classes, the natural, the ideal, and the spiritual. The natural is that which would seem probable from the processes and laws of nature; the ideal, that which the human brain can imagine as most splendid; and the spiritual, that which is taught by religion...
...bliss. At least, that was where the "Indiscretion of Truth" came in. Truth was a maiden fair to see. She rashly wrote to one man that she would meet him at an inn and be his bride. He sent her an answer that he could not be there, and chose a trusted friend for his courier, and the friend had to make believe he was Truth's husband in order to quiet his suspicions of the innkeeper. Whereupon Scottish Law declared Truth married to both men. But Truth really loved a third party, whose identity it would be a shame...
...never heard a lecture by some of the men most truly representative of the best in Harvard's Faculty! To go through Harvard without having sat beneath at least three or four of her greatest masters, is to let slip an opportunity, for which practically every one of us chose Harvard in preference to any other American college...