Word: reads
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...college at large) are keenly interested. We read the papers, for "dope," as we cannot attend the secret practice, and we know that the "dope" we read is mostly "fake." We guess, compare scores, hear rumors from other colleges, and gradually work ourselves into a fever of excitement before the match game with Yale...
Freshmen vs. Boston English High School.--Won by Freshmen (K. Reynolds, W. A. Barron, W. L. Allen, Jr., F. J. O'Brien); second, English High School (W. H. Meanix, O. G. Howe, W. A. (Ferguson, G. E. Read). Time...
...Frost, H. B. Goodfriend, F. F. Greenman, R. S. Grinnell, J. A. Henderson, A. K. Henry, S. Hoffman, J. A. Howe, J. F. Hurst, D. M. Levy, J. R. Lincoln, J. H. Lowell, H. C. McDuffle, A. H. Onthank, S. P. Parsons, L. D. Pedrick, K. G. Read, W. G. Rice, Jr., G. N. Richard, W. E. Shea, H. E. Stapies, L. C. Stowell, M. Van Buren, B. S. Welles, C. A. Williams, Jr., R. G. Wilson, J. D. Winslow...
Altogether the student who wishes to read Shakespeare must, in three hours, write fifty paragraphs (not paraphrases), and quote parallel passages, plus eight additional essays of two or more pages each, not to mention divers memory passages...
...HARVARD CRIMSON, daily paper to the University and dispenser of advertisements that those who run to 'nine-o'clocks' may read, came forth Thursday morning with an editorial on 'Dramatics at Harvard' sandwiched into a page of frantic commercial appeals from people who make the sort of breakfast food that produces brain tissue and the sort of cigarette 'that every college boy smokes.' And the CRIMSON--or as it is affectionately known at Harvard, 'The Crime'--informed its readers that, however the college graduate flourished on Broadway, the state of dramatics--and by this it meant principally acting--within...