Word: grouped
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Although the M.I.T. group defeated Harvard in a close game three years ago, the University teams have since been successful, winning last year 9 to 0. The M.I.T. sextet this year has played but one game, which it lost to Boston University last Saturday, but other than that, little is known of the team's strength...
Coach Stubs plans to start the game with the above lineup, but alternate the following group frequently during the first and second periods: C.B. Lakin, '30 r.w., J.B. Garrisson '31, c. John Cross, l.w., M.N. Stanley, r.d., and W.L. Shearer '29, l.d. Newhall and Jackson will probably both see action in the net. In the final period, the coach plans to use a third and fourth group, thus giving him an idea of the calibre of his entire squad in a game...
Elections of the second and final group of Senior officers will be held today in Sever and Harvard Halls from 9 to 4 o'clock and in Pierce Hall from 9 to 1 o'clock. A Permanent Secretary, a Permanent Class Committee of two, a Class Day Committee of seven, and an Album Committee of five members will be elected from the 40 nominees for office...
...this group, Captain Tudor and Giddens were regular members of the University first string sextet last year, while Holbrook and the two Bigelows were first string reserves and saw action in every important game, except a few in which Holbrook was prevented from participating on account of injuries...
...sees as emerging & disappearing in cycles, each one, like a flower, experiencing birth, growth, decay, death. Our own Western civilization he declares to be in the phase of decay, characterized by material expansion, effete spirituality. Collapse is imminent in perhaps 300 years. But by that time another human group will be unwittingly generating a new civilization to flourish and sink in its own long turn. Herein lies the refutation of the charge of pessimism applied to Spengler by lesser minds. Regarding civilizations as organisms, he is no more the pessimist than any man who recognizes the transient nature...