Word: wescott
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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From the display of football which Tufts showed against Colby, it is obvious that the University will play in more than a practice game next Saturday Colby scored twice on flukes; at no other time were they in Tufts danger zone. Wide end runs by Hadley and Wescott, and some beautiful complicated forward passes permitted Tufts to gain at will, Colby being powerless to cope with this open style of play. A triple pass, netting thirty yards, was worked to perfection by the Medford team...
Greeley, A. L., 20 Wescott St., Dorchester...
...assistants in Economics, L. M. Bristol 1G., C. E. Hughes, Jr., 2L., L. A. W. Lahee '11, J. Morrison '11, C. B. Stoner 2G.B., T. York 2G.; as assistant in Government, H. Fish, Jr., 1L.; as assistants in Chemistry, R. S. Hubbard '11 and E. W. Wescott '11; as assistant in Botany, C. S. Hoar; as assistants in Mathematics, R. Beatley '13 and H. J. Ettlinger 1G.; as lecturer in Municipal Government, N. Matthews, Jr., '75; as instructor in Sanitary Analysis, J. W. M. Bunker; as instructor in Sanitary Chemistry for six months, M. C. Whipple; as Austin Teaching Fellows...
...recent meeting of the editorial board of the Monthly, Kenneth Williams Hunter '11, of Albany, N. Y., and Ernest Waters Wescott '12, of Boston, were elected regular editors...
...that he was not impelled by such a motive. His reason for refusing to accept Seligmann's communication was because, in his opinion, it was a refutation of a point not raised in another communication by G. E. J., and therefore hardly pertinent to the controversy. Moreover, E. W. Wescott and the editors of the Monthly, who are of course directly responsible for this inexcusably careless misstatement of facts never even took the trouble to interview the president about this grossly misreported conversation. This obviously slanderous criticism is unfortunately too characteristic of the Monthly's whole method of attack...