Word: frankness
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Frank, Matthews 12, from...
...Frank William George 2M., of Bristol, New Hampshire, center fielder, prepared at the Tilton Seminary, in Tilton, N. H. He was captain of his school nine for three years. He is 22 years old, weighs 138 pounds and is 5 feet 8 inches in height...
...Frank L. Quinby '02S., of New York City, second baseman, prepared at Andover, where he played second base for three years. He was third baseman on last year's university nine. He is 21 years old, weighs 140 pounds and is 5 feet, 8 inches in height...
...last number of the Advocate is hardly up to the standard set by the new board of editors. The stories, though most of them pleasing, show no particular depth. "The Unmaking of a Soldier," by Frank Simonds '00 is not a new story, but is fairly well told. "Four Characters," by W. Stevens '01, goes rather deeper than most of the Advocate's contributions. "A Morning's Catch," by F. M. Class '03, is a lively, pleasing story of the usual "storiette" type. "Pipe No. 29," by H. W. Bynner' 02, depicts vividly the Chinese character, but leaves...
...strung three incidents, not closely related, into a connected story. "The Hum-Drum Company," by F. R. DuBois, is out of the ordinary run, and after the writer once gets started, the story moves easily, needing no effort on the reader's part. "Sammie Bent's Stripes," by Frank Simonds, is nothing more than an anecdote, but it is well told, with perfect harmony of detail. "Hunting," by J. C. Grew, is a commendable attempt at word-painting. "Merton," by C. F. C. Arensberg, lacks pith and distinct purpose. It starts as a college story and finishes with two summer...