Word: finds
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...School man who has spent some years in Europe, desires to find five men to accompany him on a trip for the summer vacation. It is proposed to visit London, Paris, Holland, Belgium, the Rhine, Switzerland, Northern Italy, Austria and Germany, doing the more interesting portions on bicycles. For full particulars address, X, care of Leavitt and Peirce...
...most important change was White from substitute to No. 5. White was recently recalled to the crew, as men were needed to fill several vacant places. He is doing well and may find a permanent place in the boat. Sleeper was moved from No. 4 to No. 2 and Hollister, who has recovered, was put in at No. 4. Phelps is again at No. 7. The present order is: Bow, Cornwell; 2, White; 6, Sprague; 7, phelps; stroke, Irving...
...trembling on the verge of probation; the standing of the men is something the knowledge of which belongs strictly to the men themselves and about which we know nothing. We speak of the matter simply because the temptation is strong for freshman athletes to disegard college work until they find themselves in a position from which there is no recovery. It is a provoking carelessness which is regretted immensely by the men themselves after the harm has resulted, and we caution the men on the nine and the crew to keep their regular work in good shape so that nothing...
Fifty years ago, he said, the object of every Christian church was to find out how the early church was managed and then to base on this its own organization. But now everything is changed. No church would want to change its forms of service and government and accommodate itself to the primitive methods of the early Christians which would very naturally be now utterly impracticable. That this is true was conclusively shown about twelve years ago when a manuscript was found showing how the church was managed in the first century. When the discovery was announced every sect, Baptist...
...century; like Donn and Carew, but above all like Crashaw. In every verse of Thompson's we see the intellect at work, and whatever he does he spiritualizes. That Thompson is not always seventeenth century is shown in his poem "Daisy," as sweet, simple and modern as anything we find in contemporary poetry...