Word: school-boys
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...University relay team will run the B. A. A. a 390-yard-per-man relay this afternoon at the annual school-boy B. A. A. meet this afternoon at Mechanics Hall. Coach Donovan's quartet will have to run without the services of three of its regular men. Captain Capper and W. J. Bingham are going to New York with the Glee Club this afternoon, which will necessarily, keep them out of the running, while Tower has been afflicted with an attack of indigestion and will also be unable to run. This leaves Willcox the only regular left...
...University 390-yard team will run the B. A. A. at the School-boy Meet on Saturday...
...instead of the week before the Intercollegiate as has been the custom in former years. As a result, the meet conflicts with the annual games of the Boston High School Track and Field League, which will be held Saturday at Wood Island, with the Suburban League meet at Tufts Oval, and with the national interscholastic meet, at Traverse Island, New York. As a result, some of the leading school-boy athletes in this section of New England will be unable to enter the national championships at Traverse Island. Likewise some of the school-boy stars in other sections...
...about the University has been approved by the Alumni Association which has started the contributions. About 5000 copies will be printed and distributed through the constituent territorial clubs of the Federation which will send them to their home towns and schools. A booklet which serves this purpose is published by other colleges and is necessary to give the school-boy in the West and South that knowledge of life in the University which no list of studies or mere description of buildings can impart. That the information given may be unprejudiced and convincing undergraduates of varied activities and achievements have...
...justifies the title. The real stage-business of the piece, the actual sophistry, like the killing in a Greek tragedy is done behind the scense; but that hardly concerns the critic, and the author has done cleverly what he set out to do. The writer of the account of school-boy incidents, "As Related by Mr. Reginald Richards," essays, not wholly without sucess, that spirit of virile and forceful juvenility which appeals to us all in "Tom Sawyer;" the fun, however, is meagre and the piece too young by several years; it belongs rather in the columns...