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Word: hasard (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...editorial from the Boston Post deploring a "restricted Lord Bryce". Why did the Viscount address fifteen hundred Harvard students when he might, have spoken to--well a mere modest million of Post readers? We do not know and it is none of our business. If we were to hasard a guess it would be that he preformed to "confine his words to a limited number of hearers" and just why he would not do so we have yet to discover. "Was it not a mistake?", asks the Post, as if the Viscount or the University were in error. If Lord...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FREE SPEECH | 9/30/1921 | See Source »

Plunge for distance--Won by Hasard (M. I. T.), distance, 54 ft.; Dixon (H.), Second, distance, 52 ft.; Monro (H.), third, distance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Swimming Team Defeated M. I. T. | 2/27/1915 | See Source »

Water polo--Won by Brown. Score--Brown, 4; Harvard, 0. Goals--Burgess, 4. Time--8-minute half. Line-up: HARVARD. BROWN. Allen, f. f., McDonald Quinlan, f. f., Marston Welch, f. f., Burgess McCleod, b. b., Hasard Hellmann, Myers, b. b., Parker Morrison, b. b., Owen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Brown Defeated in Swimming | 1/19/1906 | See Source »

Water-polo-Won by Brown. Score-Brown, 3; Harvard, 0. Goals made by-McDonald, Marston, Burgess. Time-5 and 6-minute halves. Line-up: HARVARD. BROWN. Cunniff, g. g., Hasard George, f. f., Price Quinlan, f. f., Burgess Cox, f. f., Marston Hellman, Farley, b. b., McDonald Sherburne, b. b., Colber

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Easily Won Swimming Meet. | 3/3/1905 | See Source »

Last evening in the Fogg Art Museum Professor de Sumichrast lectured on Goldsmith and Marivaux. He began by fully summarizing Goldsmith's play, "She Stoops to Conquer," and Marivaux's play "Le Jeu de I'Amour et du Hasard," quoting frequently from each. He proceded to draw a comparison between the two play wrights, vastly to the advantage of Marivaux. He said that Marivaux is superior to Goldsmith in construction and is more thoroughly artistic. In Marivaux's play the analysis is subtle and delicate, the characters carefully and minutely drawn, the interest concentrated throughout. Goldsmith's play is diffuse...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Goldsmith and Marivaux. | 1/9/1897 | See Source »

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