Word: manly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...basketball team, after two weeks of inactivity, resumed practice last night. The first game, with Holy Cross on the Hemenway floor, is scheduled for February 6. Holy Cross has one of the strongest teams in the East this year. It is practically a veteran team, having lost only one man, Captain Reilly, who graduated last year. In their last game, Holy Cross defeated Brown...
...geophysical methods are not simple. They require thorough preparations in physics and geology, not only for laying out the work, manipulating the instruments and securing the readings, but above all in interpreting the results. They are in no sense "dividing rods," available for the use of the untrained man. They are merely instruments for the measurement of physical fields that, under favorable conditions, give results of significance and value to the geologist. The geophysical methods are of undoubted importance in increasing the effectiveness of geological observation...
...Reid '29, captain of the University track team will once again face Leo Lermond, the Olympic star, according to an announcement of a change of plans which places the Harvard man's name upon the list of entries for the Hunter Mile, the feature distance event of the B. A. A. meet to be held in the Arena on Saturday evening...
...Knights of Columbus games at the Garden last Saturday night, the Crimson captain gave Lermond a stiff battle, matching strides with the Olympic man throughout the last quarter of the mile race. Only a spurt by Lermond on the last lap which gave him an eight yard lead, was all that defeated the University runner. Last Saturday Reid was in the midst of a stiff midyear examination schedule, and as a result was not quite up to his usual form...
...that a burr was nothing more than another reason for seeing Doctor Means. Fyffe is a consummate actor, product of the English school of generous gesture. He is as far removed from American vaudeville standards as Ruth Draper or George Arliss. Last night he gave three portraits: an old man, a sailor, and a mildly intoxicated inciter of the proletariat. These are fat material, and Fyffe has brought to them a rollicking voice that was born in the sea chanty rather than the inhaled, lyric school of voice culture. A few cravens will want to know that he does...