Word: keyed
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...line-up of the two Crimson teams today will be as follows: University team.--Singles: 1, Morris Duane '23, captain; 2, K. S. Pfaffman '24; 3, G. C. Guild '23; 4, R. N. Bradley '22; 5, J. D. Farnham '23; 6, D. McK. Key '22. Doubles: 1, Morris Duane '23 and K. S. Pfaffman '24; 2, G. C. Guild '23 and D. McK. Key '22; 3, J. D. Farnham '23 and C. P. Holmes...
...this regard, entirely sane. For there may be athletic as well as scholastic, and utilitarian as well as social, insanity. He who has set his heart entirely upon major letters and final clubs is in no better case than he who would win high grades and a Key; and the man who indulges in an overdose of extra-curriculum activities is no better off than either of the others. A sense of balance is a rare thing, and difficult to maintain...
...southern trip at 1.05 today, when the members of the team will take the train for Providence, R. I. The following men will make the trip: Captain Morris Duane '23, J. D. Farnham '23, L. R. Frost '23, G. C. Guild '23, C. P. Holmes '22, D. McK. Key '22, and K. S. Pfaffman...
...Key '22 won the championship of the University by a small margin. In the tournament for the championship of the College, he was defeated by Malcolm Bradlee '22, captain of the University squash racquets team. Channing Wakefield 1L., a member of last year's University team, won the championship of the Law School. Myles P. Baker 1G.B., also a member of last year's University team, won the championship of the Business School. C. B. Crockett E.S. won in the Engineering School, and N. E. A. Hinds Sp. in the Graduate School. In the Freshman championship W. P. Dixon...
...some, college is an amusing four years, to some it means a Phi Beta Kappa key or an education, and to still others it is only four years of dull preparation for a life of banking or insurance. The last attitude has been increasing, to judge by the hue and cry recently raised about the passing of the old "cultural college". That business men, however, regard colleges as mere training schools for their assistants and successors becomes rather doubtful in view of Mr. Emerson's article in the current issue of "The Independent...