Word: turning
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...record made by J. P. Adams of Yale in 1899. F. W. Capper '15 set a terrific pace in this race, going the first quarter in 54 2-5 seconds. T. W. Koch '14 went into the lead in the back stretch, but tired and was passed on the turn by Brown. In the home stretch Poucher's sprint took second place from Cappen who had worked forward again after having fallen behind...
There are certain times in the year when the Freshman's duty to his class and thus to the College is to turn out and march. Today is one of those times. Class spirit and Kanrich's band should stir every 1916 man to join the parade to Soldiers Field to see the class team meet its deadliest yet worthiest rival in an effort to continue the clean sweep which 1916 teams have so far had over Yale 1916. Track followers announce that the meet will be close, and perhaps whole-hearted support or lack of it will account...
...Freshman class will attend the 1916 track meet with Yale tomorrow afternoon in a body. The class will assemble in front of Matthews promptly at 2 o'clock and, headed by Kanrich's band, will proceed immediately to the Stadium. Every freshman is urged to turn out and support the team...
Granted that to a large extent intellectual ability is dependent upon natural alertness and sensitiveness to intellectual stimuli, we believe that this superiority in any individual is to be explained in his attitude toward such work. A college man with a good mind may turn his energy to other things; he may become efficient and productive in other ways, yet remain intellectually sterile. One of the greatest dangers of American college life is the undue importance attached to honors to be won apart from studies. In concentration lies the secret of success and for concentration genuine intellectual interest amounting...
...farmer's household. "The Wedding Dress" by Miss Katherine McDowell Rice, Sp., Radcliffe, also treats of farm life, but the scene is laid in New England, so that the character of the piece contrasts with the work of Mr. Ballard. It is a homely little drama of swift, unforeseen turn, against New England character in some of its strange phases. The third play, "Ygraine of the Hillfolk" by R. E. Rogers '09, is the second drama in verse which the club has acted in its five years of producing Harvard plays. It unfolds a tense Viking tale of wrong suffered...