Word: riche
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...replaced White at left guard in the second half, strengthened that side of the line. The ends were again slow on punts, but Leary played a very steady game, and Knowlton, although showing lack of experience, was strong on the offense. The offensive work of the Dartmouth backs, notably Rich and Herr, was evidence of the advantage which team play gives against a heavier eleven, or one with stronger individual men. R. Glaze was Dartmouth's most brilliant player and besides being a remarkably fast end, he was used effectively in carrying the ball. DeAngelis, left end, also was fast...
...Dartmouth line-up was as follows: l.e., Church, Kennedy; 1.t., Bankert; 1g., Thayer; c., Griffin; r.g., Gage; r.t., smith; r.e. R. Glaze; q.b., J. Glaze; l.h.b., Main r.h.b., Herr, f.b., Rich...
This year holders of H. A. A. tickets who in previous years have been admitted free to the Harvard-Yale baseball game will have to pay $1.50 for seats in the cheering section. The introduction of these tickets has enabled the poor as well as the rich student to see all the games played by our varsity team. These games are part of University life; they are played by our fellow students and friends, and we all want to see them. We ought then to have this privilege at the lowest possible cost. In the face...
...that it matters at all whether it does or not. But the opposition to the settlement within the University is another matter. The cry of undergraduates for harsher punishment for an undergraduate; the echo in the Bulletin of "the charge that in Harvard College the rich man is treated better than the poor"; are not a little depressing. "The government of a University," says ex-Dean Briggs, "cannot with safety be entrusted to students; they are harsher than their elders and less just to persons whom they dislike." For my part, I would rather be caught, at twenty, lifting...
...site having been the hunting-lodge erected by Louis XIII. This was added to by his son, who used it for a similar purpose, and who had the architect, Le Vau, add largely to the accommodations and change it into a residence worthy of the sovereign of a rich and powerful nation. Later Mansart set to work in his turn, and increased the size and splendor of Versailles around which, in the meantime, the king had caused a city to rise. The superb gardens and park, with their wealth of statuary, first in stone and lead, then in bronze...