Word: fourteen
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...fourteen men who received their insignia this fall, eight will be eligible for next year's eleven. The greatest loss comes in the graduation of Captain Weld '16, who was the mainstay of the line this season. Other men to graduate are S. A. Hartwell; Jr., '16, D. Moffatt '16, L. G. E. Reilly '17, who graduates in three years, S. A. Robinson '16, and R. W. Wood...
...operation of the students, nearly every student is engaged at one time or another in some form of physical exercise. An association whose membership contains representation from all the classes, the upper class clubs, and the commons, appears to be unique among universities. The body is interested in fourteen sports and is kept alive and flourishing through the initiative of the undergraduates, who have their officers, their dues, their schedules, and prizes which demand a budget of more than $300 yearly. The aim of the association is the promotion of athletic competition among men who are not members of university...
...Fourteen hundred and sixty-one temporary positions were filled during 1914-15, embracing 76 different kinds of work. Three hundred and forty-eight men secured work as guides: while the monitor and typewriter divisions are both well over 200. The classes having over 50 enrolled are as follows: choreman, clerk, proctor, tutor, "tutor and companion," and waiter. The highest average per man for term-time employment was $983.93 accredited to the "tutor and companion" class in which $14,609 was earned altogether. The average of the newspaper correspondents division comes next with $712.75; the "instructors" third and hotel employees fourth...
...Fourteen members of the University Glee Club and a quartet from the instrumental clubs will give a concert at the Howard Seminary, West Bridgewater, this evening at 8 o'clock. Dancing will follow the concert...
...result of my few terms at Hebron Academy was that I entered Harvard College in 1853, at fourteen years of age. . . . I look back upon my college education with less satisfaction than any other part of my life. I was not thoroughly fitted. I was too young. The mistake was made, with a well-meant but mistaken view of saving me from the 'dangers of college life,' of boarding me for the first two or three years a mile away from the college--as if there were any dangers or, if there were, as if the best part...