Word: elys
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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After resting yesterday afternoon, the University track squad of nearly sixty men will leave at 9 o'clock this morning for New Haven, where tomorrow it will encounter, in its objective meet of the season, the dangerous Eli team. Starting from Cambridge shortly after 1 o'clock yesterday, the Crimson athletes journeyed to Manchester, where they passed the afternoon, and after dinner at the Essex Country Club, returned early in the evening...
...University chapter of Phi Beta Kappa will do its utmost to down its ancient rivals, Yale's Phi Beta Kappas, on the Freshman baseball diamond at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The Crimson aggregation held its first practice yesterday afternoon. A report from New Haven states that the Eli nine has been practicing some time to avenge the defeat it suffered at the hands of its hosts in Cambridge two years...
...Yale first-year men at 2.30 o'clock this afternoon on the Divinity courts. The 1926 players enter the contest with the odds well in their favor because, in addition to a record of no defeats, the Freshmen can find encouragement in the story of Yale's matches. The Eli net-men defeated Hill 5-1, but lost to Choate 2-4 and to the Princeton Freshmen 4-5. The Crimson players, on the other hand, have been scored against only by the Newton High School team, which took four points of their contest to the Freshmen's five...
...Judson Arthur Smith, '15, Fellow in Obstetrics, has been appointed for the remainder of the academic year from April 15, 1923; Dr. George Ashley Campbell for the remainder of the academic year from May 1, 1923. Other appointments are: for two years from September 1, 1923:--Dr. Arthur Eli Monroe '08, a member of the committee on Divisional Examinations in History, Government, and Economics; and Mr. Paul Rice Doolin 2G., tutor in history and literature...
...Wade and Boylston prizes was held last night in Sanders Theatre before a large audience. The Wade prize of $50 was awarded by the unanimous decision of the judges to Oviatt McConnell '23 of Buffalo, N. Y., who read for his piece Rudyard Kipling's dramatic poem, "Gunga Din". Eli Allen Smith '25 of Worcester received the first Boylston Prize of $35 for his selection, "Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln" by Henry Watterson, while the second prize of $25 went to Norman Edwin Hines '23 of Portland, Conn., who read John Bright's "Faith in the People". It is interesting...