Word: fined
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Princeton's representatives to the conference are: Dean Howard McClenahon, chairman of the Committee on Outdoor Sport and Chairman of the Board of Athletic Controol; Dean H. B. Fine, member of the Committee on Outdoor Sport; Howard H. Henry, chairman of the Football Committee; W. E. Green, chairman of the Baseball Committee; Professor C. W. Kennedy, chairman off the Track Committee, and Knox Tailor, delegate at large...
...their rooms before 9 o'clock at night, and on Sunday were forbidden to leave them for walking, visiting, or any other unnecessary business. "Idle, bitter scoffing, offensive gestures, the wearing of indecent apparal or women's apparal" made one liable to a whipping or a fine. Students at that time, however, proved that everything was not covered by the rules, and managed to execute such pranks as letting prisoners out of Charlestown jail
Princeton, N. J., November 25.--Princeton's representatives at the triangular eligibility conference between Harvard, Yale, and Princeton will be Dean McClenahan, chairman of the Princeton Athletic Committee, H. B. Fine, W. E. Green, H. Henry, Professor C. W. Kennedy, and M. Taylor...
...season of 1916 Princeton will have as fine a selection of material as has ever been available for its football eleven in years. Ten letter men will be lost by graduation: Bamman, H. Brown, Butterworth, Captain Glick, Heyniger, Lamberton, Larsen, Law, Love and Shea. Five of these men have played on the team for three successive years, namely, Brown, Glick, Lamberton, Law, and Shea, and the experience of these men will, of course, be greatly missed. However, since eight regulars return, there will be men fully capable of stepping into these positions, many of whom have had training...
...both substance and form and that ambition to produce fancy work displaces ambition to produce works of art. Better poems are written almost daily in Harvard College than those which appear in this number. A similar comment might be made on the prose, which exhibits nearly everywhere insensibility to fine workmanship...