Word: fernandez
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Hallowell Vaughan Morgan '10, of Germantown, Pennsylvania, was elected president of the Advocate last evening in place of William George Tinckom Fernandez '10, of Quetta, India, resigned. Thomas Stearns Eliot '10, of St. Louis, Missouri, was made secretary to fill the vacancy thus formed. The following business managers were elected: Seward Churchyard Simons '11, of Pasadena, California, John Heard, Jr., '12, of Boston...
...verse is very much better. The first stanza of Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez's "The Game" is as good as any undergraduate verse one is likely to see in a long time, and the entire poem, though it does not keep up to this high level, is notable in its sincerity and vigor. Mr. Pulsifer's "The Riderless Horse" presents a striking idea with effective brevity, the difficult verse-form is fairly well handled, and the phrasing is at times admirable. The same writer's "Third Down," however, suffers from its close resemblance to four lines of Browning's "Meeting...
...whole, the number is praise worthy as a presentation of material clearly representative of undergraduate thought on a subject of immediate interest. The weakness of the stories is offset by the vigor of the verse; and Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez's poem alone is enough to give the number distinction
...State, contributes a concise article on The Diplomatic Service of the United States which should be of distinct value to the student thinking of making that service his life work. Mr. Phillips has himself contributed towards raising the standard of both our consular and diplomatic services. Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez has a pleasant and facile swing in his Ballad of Harvard Square. His verse suggests Kipling, who has, above all writers of our time, caught the fancy of young poets and story-tellers. A story by Mr. Van Rensselaer, The Corward, also has a suggestion of Kipling, but more...
...Fernandez, M. J., 551 Massachusetts Ave., Boston...