Word: though
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...work. In the past year the Medical School has made remarkable additions to its teaching force, and has more than held its own in numbers. The Dental School, like the School of Business Administration, shows a considerable growth. Surveying the figures as a whole, they are quite satisfactory. Though not showing rapid growth in numbers, they demonstrate the increasing stability and popularity of the various departments...
...watch, for there was a variety of playing such as is seldom seen; forward passes were prettily executed, line plunges were cleanly done, runs in from kicks were spectacular, end runs were done behind well formed interference, and shift plays and delayed passes were used profusely. Moreover, though the teams were not evenly matched, Holy Cross did her full share to make the game exciting...
...team except the backs. The men played together all the time, showing the dash which was so marked in the Yale game last year. The tackles and ends were always together in the plays and tackled like one man. The guards and centre were solid and determined, though perhaps not brilliant...
...Frothingham, who was injured earlier in the season, was back in the game yesterday at left end. T. Frothingham took Hitchcock's place at right tackle and Cleary played left tackle. Hitchcock, though slightly injured in Wednesday's practice, was on the field in uniform. Both he and Storer, however, were given a complete rest...
...October Monthly gives fresh evidence that the editors are no longer consecrated either to pure literature or to impure anarchy, but take a wholesome view of their relation to letters and to life. The number, though short, is happily varied: timely discussion is succeeded by prose and verse in which time is little concerned and by editorial articles concise and to the point. Some of the work lacks technical skill; none of it is discreditable; and nearly all of it is interesting. The worst thing in the number is the elephantine finesse of the maxim appended to the table...