Word: rich
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...reversible versatility of Bishop, the Kansan whirlwind, who filled both positions of pitcher and catcher with the utmost nonchalance. In the final inning Captain Ingram reached third on errors for which the candidates were awarded ten points credit, and was brought home with the winning run by Rich's strike...
...Waldo Forbes '95; on the History of Printing, George Parker Winship '93; on Fire Insurance (Business School), William Bliss Mendlicott; on Life Insurance (Business School), Herman Beeman Dow '79; on Investments (Business School), John Farwell Moors '83; on the Theory and Practice of Rate Making (Business School), Edgar Judson Rich '87; on Business Policy (Business School), Arch Wilkinson Shaw; on Factory Management (Business School), Frederic Gallup Coburn; on Printing and Publishing (Business School), Charles Chester Lane '04; on Lumbering, John Matthew Gries; as Superintendent of the Reading Room of the Graduate School of Business Administration, Walter Moreland Stone...
...scenery, designed in the modern manner especially for this revival, is rich in pictorial and suggestive effect, and comprises eleven different scenes. The players, numbering more than forty, were coached by Professor Richard Ordynski and Mr. Everett Glass. The leading characters of Falstaff, the King, and Prince Hal are played by C. B. Wetherell '08, F. A. Wilmot '10, and S. Hume '13, respectively, in a way that bears comparison with professional acting...
...depicted forcefully the conditions of the United States at the present time in its contented attitude of settling back to grow rich and its "corporal's guards which chase from Alaska to Vera Cruz" with no definite purpose; the fleet with its individual ships in good order but lacking as "a fighting unit." All of which, he said, showed the inconsistent lack of detail. Congress did not go far enough, it was willing to do as much as its intelligence could comprehend but there it stopped...
...current issue of the Harvard Illustrated, which has waited until a few days before March before distributing its February edition, contains articles and photographs covering a wide field of subjects. The contents are rich in variety but in many places poor in literary workmanship...