Word: masse
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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FIRST MARSHAL. BARTON KINGMAN STEPHENSON Brookline, Mass. SECOND MARSHAL THIRD MARSHAL JAMES MORTIMER MONTGOMERY, JR. JOHN DONALDSON NICHOLS New York City New York City SECRETARY NICHOLAS KELLEY New York City ORATOR IVY ORATOR ARTHUR CAMPBELL BLAGDEN CHARLES DAVIS MORGAN New York City. Plymouth, Mass. POET JULIAN HINCKLEY Lawrence, N. Y. ODIST CHORISTER HENRY ADAMS BELLOWS HENRY BRAY SAWYER Boston, Mass. Melrose, Mass. CLASS COMMITTEE ROBERT GRANT, JR. Boston, Mass. EDWARD JOSIAH DIVES DANIEL ALLERTON NEWHALL Reading, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. CLASS DAY COMMITTEE FRANCIS ABBOT GOODHUE, JR. Andover, Mass. JOSEPH LYMAN WHITE FISHER HILDRETH NESMITH Cambridge, Mass. Lowell, Mass. WILLIAM FORBES...
...McClanahan continued for the affirmative. My colleague has shown, he said, that the great mass of students cannot take part in the game, and I will show that the game is detrimental to those who do participate; first, to the player's general health; second to his intellectual development. Violent training, necessary to so violent a game, causes physical exhaustion and does lasting injury to circulation digestion, and nutrition. Muscle gained at the sacrifice of the vital organs is worse than useless. Then fatalities are a part of the price paid for the sport. In spite of precautionary training numerous...
...demands success at the sacrifice of honor and fair play. There is a distinct tendency today towards unfair, and brutal playing, and this unfits football for a place among college sports. Unfair methods are profitable towards victory, and there is every incentive to their use. The close formations and mass plays make it possible for a player to violate the rules and escape detection, and such opportunities are often augmented by the leniency of officials and spectators, and by inadequate punishment of offenses. The men who play the game are between nineteen and twenty-five years of age and their...
...William Lawrence, D.D., '71, bishop of Massachusetts, presided at the mass meeting in Sanders Theatre last night. John R. Mott spoke on "The Possibilities of the Student World in the Extension of Christ's Kingdom," and Rev. Arthur S. Lloyd, D.D., general secretary of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society spoke on "The End of Missions: The World for God." Mr. Mott enlarged upon many chances for young missionaries to Christianize the world, and of the Christian universities and colleges in pagan countries which would spread the gospel among their own people. The resurrection of Christ, the perfect man, said...
...nineteenth annual convention of the Church Students' Missionary Association will end this evening with a mass meeting in Sanders Theatre at 8 o'clock. Rt. Rev. William Lawrence, D.D., '71, bishop of Massachusetts, will preside. John R. Mott, general secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation, will speak on "The Possibilities of the Student World in the Extension of Christ's Kingdom," and Rev. Arthur S. Lloyd, D.D., general secretary of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society will speak on "The End of Missions: The World for God." All members of the University and Episcopalians especially are cordially invited...