Word: murdock
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Goldman 3L.; 49-60, C. Silbert 1L.; 13-24, S. K. Roy 2G.S.; 25-36, S. E. Dubbel; Ware, 1-25, W. F. Power '17; 26-50, E. L. Keyes '15; Weld, 1-27, R. L. Dodge '17; 28-54, J. T. Beal '17; Westmorly, 1-47, K. B. Murdock '16; 101-146, E. P. Warner '16; 45 Winthrop St., G. Lamont...
There follows bits of verse of varying merit by Messrs. Willcox, Sanger, Barlow, Whistler, and Murdock; an article on "Harvard and the Public Eye," by Mr. K. B. Murdock; and pieces of fiction by Messrs. J. W. Walcott, O. D. Douglas, and H. Jackson, Jr. In "Harvard and the Public Eye," Mr. Murdock, who seems to stand in great awe of the "Century"--he calls it the 'majestic' "Century"--points out the futility of trying to arrive at general conclusions about Harvard, unless one knows Harvard life thoroughly. In "The Treasure of Carvaernon" (the name in the story itself...
...Advocate takes pleasure in announcing the election to the board of Benjamin Preston Clark, Jr., '16 of Boston; Richard Mather Jopling '16, of Marquette, Mich.; Kenneth Ballard Murdock '16, of Chestnut Hill; and Ross Theodore Whistler '16, of Baltimore, Md., as regular editors; and of Phillips Bradley '16 of Lincoln; Roger Lowell Putnam '15, of Manchester; and Ross Whittler '16, of Milton, as business editors...
...Land." One passes indifferently over the trite "heart-story" which lies behind this rhapsody and forgives Mr. Jopling some melodramatic lines, content to find in him true appreciation of the great western desert and a gift of expression which sometimes reaches eloquence. There is nothing to praise, in Mr. Murdock's effusion on "The Game." It embodies an idea latent in the minds of many people, that poetry means making similes and the more the better. Mr. Sanger's poem on election which knows no form. It might go on forever, or it might be cut down by three stanzas...
...nonprofessionalism in amateur athletics stands out as the most noteworthy contribution to the magazine. The exposition is admirably clear and just, the illustrations are well chosen, and there is a maturity in the style which is most grateful to the reader. "The Joy of being a Freshman," by Mr. Murdock, is in humorous vein, and enjoys a real merit among pieces of its kind in making fun moderately and in having a vital subject. The writer has discovered a truth is too late,--that of all four years at college there are only two which really count, the last...