Word: oberline
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...numerous and formidable: Brown 1900 C., is perhaps the best of the lot-he was on last year's team; Dickson, Pearsall, Thatcher, Ruetter, Leighton and Shape are other promising candidates. Sherrill is the best catcher on the squads, but is ineligible until the later games. Sherrill was Oberlin's crack back-stop last year. Schwartz will no doubt do the bulk of the catching. Coombs, Hodge and Lucas are also trying for catcher...
Former students of the Summer School are physical instructors at such universities and colleges as the following: Brown, Johns Hopkins, Indiana, Illinois, Bowdoin, Dickinson, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Amherst, Bates, Dart mouth, Oberlin, Chicago, Kansas, Lehigh, Wesleyan, Colby, Haverford, Trinity, Rutgers, Tufts, Williams, Oregon, Oberlin and Leland Stanford, Jr. In all over 700 physical instructors have been trained in the Hemenway Gymnasium during the last ten years. The Harvard system of apparatus forms the equipment of 740 gymnasiums of the country, 263 of them belonging to schools and colleges...
...born at Oberlin, Ohio, on May 25th, 1844, of old New England stock on both sides. The house of his grandfather in Mansfield, Massachusetts, is still occupied by members of his family. He was graduated at Oberlin College in 1863, and after teaching some years he went to Leipsic to continue his studies, where he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1870. On his return home he taught in Tennessee University. A brilliant paper which he read at the meeting of the American Philological Association in 1871 attracted the attention of several members of this faculty, notably...
Professor Allen was born in Oberlin, Ohio, in 1844. After graduating at Oberlin College in 1863, he studied for several years at the University of Leipsic. In 1866 he became a professor at the University of Tennessee. He left that institution to accept a professorship in the University of Cincinnati and was called from there to a chair at Yale. After a short stay at Yale he accepted in 1880 the chair of classical philology at Harvard, which he held at the time of his death...
...interesting to note the increasing popularity of the Arctic regions as a summer resort for scientists, tourists and sportsmen. As far as colleges are concerned, it began in 1894, when the Cook expedition took parties from Harvard, Yale and Oberlin colleges, and which came to such an unfortunate ending. Again last year Technology and Cornell sent small parties to Greenland, and the coming summer Dartmouth, Harvard, and possibly Yale, will be represented in the field...