Word: west
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Officers of the University should enter at the north door of the chapel and students at the south door, unless accompanied by friends, when they should enter at the west door. The gallery is open to the public...
...game was devised in the winter of 1905-a rounded offence. Rush knows football. He knows as much football as Tad Jones or Haughton does. And in many ways he is as well qualified to teach it. There years ago he was coaching a preparatory school eleven in the West. Last year he produced an eleven that outrushed and out-downed both Harvard and Yale. This year he developed a team that was equipped manually to defeat Yale and which played Harvard with equal chances for victory...
...among all our national universities as the institution which comes nearer to the establishment of its national character on a basis of proportional representation among all the states than could other universities. Certainly it is much more nearly national in this respect than are the large universities of the West, who draw very largely from the states in which they are located, but who cannot entice thorough representation from the East. The statistical title is one for statisticians to determine; the real claim to rank as our most national university will depend upon an institution's grasp of the spirit...
...Ginn '18, of Winchester; Norman Percy Johnson '17, of Cambridge; George Eliot Leighton '17, of Monadnock, N. H., John Winthrop Pennock '17, of Syracuse, N. Y.; William Platt '19, of New York, N. Y.; Mamice Aaron Rudman '18, of Portland, Me.; Nelson Hathaway Seaver '17, of Roxbury; Thomas Alfred West '18, of Somerville; George Low Williams ocC, of Cambridge; George Bryant Woods '19, of Winchester; Manager Walter Staunton Mack, Jr., '17, of New York, N. Y., was also awarded...
...Polo Grounds the West Point men again triumphed over the Annapolis men. The Army has had the winning habit since 1913. Before that the Navy had had rather the better of the contests. . . . . . The midshipmen must manage, of course, to get back in their old football form as Yale has done, but Yale had suffered more from Harvard than Annapolis has yet suffered from West Point, and there is plenty of time. Congratulations to the Army and to the Yale men, but not a word of commiseration for Harvard and the Navy. There were two fair contests and the best...