Word: frosts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Monday at 5 o'clock in the Freshman Athletic Building. Coach Cowles and W. W. Ingraham '25, captain of the University team, will speak. Practice will be held outdoors as early in the week as possible. Until now it has been impossible to use the outdoor courts as the frost is still in the ground...
When all was over, it was found that Williams had 48 points, Dartmouth 41, New Hampshire 35. Captain "Jack" Frost of the Dartmouth winter sports team was disconsolate; for the first time in five years, his college had lost the championship...
...summary: HARVARD ANDOVER Saltonstall, Richardson, Chase, l.w. r.w., Collens Chase, Richardson, c. c., Rogers Crawford, Nordberg, r.w. l.w. Frost Garrison, Watts, l.d. r.d. Curtis Robinson, r.d. l.d., Pratt Morrill, g. g., Canfield, Kimball...
...window was shut, but they knew that Dean Pound was up there. One of their number had conspired to effect this by making a private appointment with the Dean for just that hour. The 700 shouted "Open the window!" Moved by an unseen hand, the pane swung from the frost-rimmed sill. Then from the motley group stepped a man of older years, George R. Nutter, a Harvard graduate, President of the Boston Bar Association. Circumstances forced him to speak in the manner of a tragedian uttering an aside?addressing the 700, but speaking to the window. He urged Dean...
...frequently as he wrote, he said, he was convulsed with laughter. The score is easy, melodious, lighthearted, reminiscent of Wagner iu mannerism rather than in poetry. Miss Bori was Mistress Ford; Tenor Gigli, Master Fenton; Mme. Alda, Nannette. All did well, But the critics, as they hailed their frost-bitten taxi-men and drove home, were replacing their familiar bromides with other phrases: "A scene quite without precedent" (The New York Times) ; "A relatively obscure singer who walked away with the chief honors" (The New York Herald-Tribune) ; "An eager young man, who made music history when the brilliant audience...