Word: starring
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Tired out by 45 minutes of hard play, the University team was able to pass the Pennsylvania defence only once in the second half, while its opponents, largely through the brilliant work of McPhee, who scored three goals in the period. McPhee, who scored four times, was the individual star of the game. Greene, Needham and Rushmore played well for Harvard...
Professor Edward C. Pickering has discovered through a photograph taken at the Harvard Astronomical Laboratory that the hydrogen line on the spectrum of the new star discovered by Professor Errebo at Dombaas. Norway shows dark instead of the usual bright yellow...
...this dark line continues it will form the basis of a new star theory, and perhaps upset some of the existing theories concerning the origin and composition of stars. Professor Pickering stated that "because the star had not been seen before it must not be taken that it has just been formed. It is several hundred years old beyond a doubt. The equation of light is such that it takes that long for the rays to come that distance to the earth...
...that the cast has had experience with the play before an audience, the performances should be thoroughly amusing to see, for this year the Society provides an "all star" cast. No part is played poorly, and practically all are in the hands of very experienced players. Doubtless, in the succeeding performances, the clearness of enunciation which marked the latter parts of Friday's play, will persist from start to finish. The players should remember that the audience at the start knows neither the archaic speech nor the diction of the actors, and needs to hear every syllable. The action...
...mile and two-mile Harvard has a great wealth of material and the competition for places will be a keen one. Captain P. R. Withington '12, should star in the two-mile, although he should he closely pressed by F. W. Copeland '13, a runner who has shown unusual promise in cross-country work and who failed to score in the Yale meet last spring by a fluke, he having stopped running a short distance from the finish line because he thought he had crossed the line. Another very promising man is R. St. B. Boyd '14, the star distance...