Word: swifts
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...following six men were picked by the judges, for the general excellence of their work in the exhibition, to represent Harvard in the contest with Yale: W. B. Swift '00, C. F. Stiles sC., L. W. Wright '02, A. W. Eliot, Jr., '02, J. A. White '03, and J. Burroughs...
...Cohoe 2G., for "On the Charles"; to A. M. Dame '02, for "A Hospital Ward"; to H. W. Eliot, Jr., '02, for "Sunset in Gloucester Harbor"; to C. F. Stiles sC., for "Sunset," and "Mount Kearsarge"; to Professor de Sumichrast, for "Slow Sinks the Sun"; to W. B. Swift '00, for "Evening," "Weary Berry Pickers," "After the Storm," and "The Dell"; to J. H. White '03, for "Portrait"; to L. W. Wright '02, for "Portrait of a Lady...
...will soon be held for the purpose of forming definite plans and arranging all details. A sufficient number of men from both Yale and Harvard have signified their intention of entering to insure the success of the contest. Men desiring to enter should apply for space to W. B. Swift, president of the Camera Club, 56 Hastings...
...Miss Eliz. R. Swift. One-third of bequest for establishing the Swift Scholarship...
Under the title of "Tom Morley's Beggary," A. H. Gilbert '01, relates an impossible story, which is later discovered to be a dream. Throughout, the story is smooth and swift, but, in plot and analysis of character, it is feeble. "Miss Carrigan: A Modern," by Lewis D. Humphry '01, is an interesting attempt at character sketching. The author plainly knows what he wants to say, and says it cleverly. "Elizabeth and Priscilla," by W. N. Seaver '00, just fails of being very good indeed. It is carefully planned and well written. But it is not convincing. "Tom's Wife...