Word: garrisoning
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Like the stories, the Advocate's poem are varied in subject matter and generally good. A section of Gerald Fitzgerald Garrison Prize poem, In Praise of Wisdom, has been included in the issue. Without the body of the work, this section is a bit pointless and certainly seems isolated, but one can still enjoy its phonetic merits. Fitzgerald's poem, I from this section, is a praise of God's power and omnipotence...
Tomorrow the court will try the cases of Frank B. Day '54, Charles F. Dubay '54, Joseph A. Dubay '53, Lloyd M. Garrison '54, David M. Hershey '53, John W. Larrabee, Jr. '55, Adrian A. West '55, Thierry Van Zuylen '54, and Gerald J. Zyfers...
...Wednesday, the court will try the cases of Frank B. Day '54, Charles E. Dubay '54, Joseph A. Dubay '53, Lioyd M. Garrison '54, David M. Hersey '53, John W. Larrabee, Jr., '55, Adrian A. West '55, Thierry Van Zuylen '54, and Gerald J. Zyfers...
These annual prizes are open to both graduates and undergraduates in addition. Peter W. Kilborn '55 won the $59 Jeremy Belknap Prize for the best French composition written by a freshman. The Lioyd McKim Garrison Prize--$128 and a silver medal--went to Gerald P. Fitzgerald '52 for his poem untitled. "In Praise of Wisdom. A Poem in Three Parts: For a Graduation...
...Maxie spilled out the whole dirty story--the story that could send Rienzi to the chair, the story that could stave off the sale of The Day, the story that could make Sam the greatest newspaper editor the city had seen since old Pop Garrison died. But did Maxie live to sign that statement? Or did Rienzi's boys get to him? Did Sam get his story anyhow? Or was the paper sold out from under him? And did Rienzi get the chair...