Word: sangers
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...Hollis 1 Richards, A. G., Matthews 23 Richardson, A. I., Stoughton 12 Ricketson, O. G., Jr., Holworthy 10 Roberts, L. C., Stoughton 12 Rodgers, P. C., Holworthy 20 Rollins, Wingate, Thayer 49 Roope, W. H., Thayer 22 Rutter, E. R., Thayer 64 Safford, T. H., Thayer 20 Sanger, W. C., Jr., Thayer 52 Saresky, Samuel, Stoughton 15 Scranton, H. A., Thayer 16 Seamans, R. C., Thayer 56 Sears, Winslow, Thayer 11 Selden, J. K., Stoughton 25 Sewall, Samuel, Stoughton 4 Seymour, F. C., Thayer 19 Seymour, H. J., Stoughton 29 Shattuck, W. H., Thayer 16 Shaw, H. H., Holworthy...
...McKinley, G. A. McKinlock, Jr., J. C. Merriam, D. Moffat, H. Nichols, W. B. Nichols, F. G. C. O'Neil, A. S. Peabody, J. H. C. Penhallow, T. R. Pennypacker, J. S. Pfaffmann, L. G. Richards, L. E. Richardson, P. C. Rodgers, W. F. Roope, W. C. Sanger, Jr., W. Sears, J. K. Selden, H. H. Shaw, H. F. Smith, E. W. Soucy, J. S. N. Sprague, R. H. Stiles, R. S. Sturgis, E. B. Thomas, C. A. Trafford, Jr., J. H. Volkmann, W. W. Weld, F. S. Whitlock, H. S. Wiggin, J. D. Williams, W. B. B. Wilson...
Committee on Publications.--F. Graves, chairman, R. Sanger, B. P. Clark, R. D. Skinner, C. H. Smith, E. H. Foreman...
...annual dinner of the Advocate will be held at the Hotel Victoria this evening at 7 o'clock. Frederic Schenck '09, of the English Department, will act as toastmaster, and the speakers will be as follows: Richard Washburn Child '03, well-known author and lawyer; Colonel William Cary Sanger '74, former assistant-secretary of war; George Wigglesworth '74, lawyer and Overseer of the University; Thomas Tileston Baldwin '86, lawyer of Boston; and John Albert Macy '99, of the Boston Herald. The five newly elected undergraduate members of the Advocate will be taken on the board at this time...
...harm. Condensation is sadly needed. Mr. Putnam would voice the emotions of a Nietzschean Superman trying to behave like an Elizabethan gallant, with disastrous results. His Sonnet (the form should not be divided like a Petrarcan sonnet, into octet and sestet) is a rash venture into archaic realms. Mr. Sanger's "Children's Land," faintly reminiscent of the song that thrilled the Brushwood Boy, is mildly pleasing though not distinguished. An occasional awkward line mars the smoothness of its metre. "Awakening," by Mr. Cram, wherein