Word: stevenson
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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During the past week considerable progress has been made in class rowing, the orders of the crews gradually becoming more settled and the work assuming a more serious aspect throughout. Coach Brown has had charge of the Senior and Junior crews and Coach Stevenson of the Sophomores...
...work of the Senior and Junior crews has consisted of short paddles down-stream under the supervision of Coach Brown from the coxswain's seat or a single. The Sophomores, have been taking much longer rows, coached by Stevenson from the launch. So far the Junior crew has shown by far the best form, having several men of experience in the boat. The Sophomores have also been improving rapidly. The Senior crew has suffered much from lack of material, and consequently is at present rowing poorly. The weather so far has been favorable for so early in the season...
...game played at Pomfret yesterday afternoon. The teams were very evenly matched throughout the game, and neither side scored until toward the end of the second half, when Huntington made the only goal. The summary: FRESHMEN. POMFRET. Yarnall, l.e. r.e., Chauncey Cutting, Hallowell, i.c. r.c., Norton Trumbull, r.c. l.c., Stevenson Reeves, r.e. l.e., Bellinger Houston, c.p. c.p., Scully Huntington, p. p., Romyne de Windt, g. g., Peabody...
...American Stage of Today," by W. P. Eaton '00; "Book of the Pearl," by G. F. King and Dr. C. H. Stevenson L.'94; "Builders of United Italy," by R. S. Holland '00; "Ideals of the Republic," by James Schouler '59: "In the Woods and on The Shore," by R. D. Ware '90: "John Keats," by A. E. Hancock, A.M. '95; "Mongols of Russia," by Jeremiah Curtin '63; "New Old Healing," by Henry Wood '92; "Richard the Third," by H. H. Furness '88; "Readings in Modern European History," Vol. I. by J. H. Robinson '87 and J. A. Beard...
...usual undergraduate variety; for the most part it consists in the rather ingenious phrasing of things which might nearly as well be left unsaid. The leading article, on "Student Guiding at Harvard," finally extracts a good point from a somewhat tedious mass of semi-jocose narrative. The article on "Stevenson at Cockermouth" is distinctly below the literary standard of the Monthly, as it is not clearly about anything, and uses words in a highly erratic fashion. Whether the writer or the editor is responsible for "flys," on page 63, it is certainly not a form to be commended...