Word: latter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Several experienced players will be absent from the squad when the latter has its first real workout under Coach E. L. Bigelow '21, on Monday. C. D. Coady '27, who was a star defense man as a schoolboy and captain of his Freshman team, is elegible this season, but is not expected to report for some time. His availability makes up in some measure for the loss of P. W. Chase '25, W. B. Ellison '27, and William Howard '27, defence men last season...
...Madame Behave" Julian Eltinge is allowed to do all the cute things that Sid Chaplin forgot to do in "Charley's Aunt." There are some moments of genuine slap-stick merriment, when Julian's trousers peep from below his skirt and Ann Pennington treats him like a sister. The latter incidently does a near- ly perfect Charleston: one of the two things for which she is noted. But where as Sid Chaplin made an extremely homely and ridiculous woman, Julian Eltinge is far too natural and graceful to be interesting. It is only as a men that he seems ridiculous
...Five Yards" McCarty of Chicago ran after Swede Oberlander of Dartmouth, was knocked down, arose and ran again. Throughout the game this performance was repeated. Often McCarty caught Oberlander, but when the latter, instead of carrying the ball, dropped back and fired it accurately into the reaching hands of Lane, then McCarty and Chicago were baffled, and Dartmouth swept on to a 33 to 7 victory that carries with it the unofficial national football title...
...suggestion-that U.S. business regulate itself. At the National Distribution Conference to be held in Washington Dec. 15, a definite plan will be introduced, discussed. The contention of the Chamber apparently is that self-government in business is more desirable that regulation by the State and will make the latter unnecessary...
...sort, and a, daily column of "Telegraphic Brevities" which were brought out on a horse-car in the early hours of the morning from the Boston Herald office and which put the news of the world in the hands of the students via the Harvard Daily Herald, gave the latter sheet much prestige. However, it ran for only a year and a half under its original name, for in October, 1883, it consolidated with the CRIMSON under the title of Herald-Crimson. A year later the name became Daily Crimson, remaining so until 1891, when it assumed its present form...