Word: n
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Earnán Ó Maille, to give him his Gaelic, was a boy of 18 when the Trouble started. Old Mother Ireland and her woes meant little to him: his family were gentry and his childhood in Mayo and Dublin had been governess-guarded. But when the guns began to pop in Dublin's Easter Week rising, O Malley's heart told him that he was Irish too. He sneaked out of the house after dark, joined a pal who had a rifle, took turns firing at British rifle flashes. Soon he had joined the Irish Republican Army...
...preparation for batting practice Coach Mitchell pared down his hurlers to the number of 13 late last week. Those retained are : Proctor H. Avon '37, Harold M. Curtiss, Jr. '39, Harold N. Edinberg '39, Francis F. Foley '39, Charles G. Houghton, Jr. '39, Edmund F. Ingalls '38, Richard M. Klein '39, William Lee, Jr. '38, John R. Mahoney '37, Donald Prouty '39, Philip N. Rose '38, Royall Victor '37, and Richard MacC, Walsh...
Protesting against the Oath Bill of Massachusetts, students and Faculty men meet in Emerson D at 8 o'clock. John B. Bowditch '37 will act as chairman while speakers number Kirtley F. Mather, professor of Geology, Arthur N. Holcombe '06, professor of Government, and Edward F. Prichard...
...hundred and twenty years ago the institution was established by Ward N. Boylston in memory of his uncle, Nicholas Boylston. It enjoys the honor of being the third oldest competition of the University, offering as prizes two $35 awards. In 1915 Dr. Francis H. Wade added to the fund an additional prize of $50 in memory of his son, Lee Wade...
...nobody thought that when Kitty stomped out of Harvard Hall he'd from the shelf the precious Shakspere stol'n and put him in his pocket. After all, Shakspere is the immortal bard who depends not on a single man for his interpretation today-a single man whose little life, as far as his plays go, is decidedly not rounded with a sleep. Could the retirment of one great teacher mean the passing of Shakspere from Harvard College...