Word: whose
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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There are now eleven candidates for the 'Varsity, whose names and weights are as follows: Hammond, '83 (captain), 185; Curtis, '83, 150; Sawyer, '83, 162; Cabot, '83, 175; Chalfant, '82, 188; Clarke, '84, 187; Perkins, '84, 184; Hudgens, '84, 185; Appleton, '84, 175; King, '84, 172; Woodward...
There are ten candidates for the junior crew: Burch (captain), 150; Perin, 158; Belshaw, 177; Baxter, 168; Hubbard, 167; Keith, 153; Binney, 155; Sessions, 156; Fox, 154; Coolidge, 155. Their coxswain will probably be Sanger, whose weight is now about 105 pounds...
...this article by interested readers. Naturally the conclusive weight of argument has been with the advocates of the European or Harvard system, since every logical consideration is in its favor, and the forum of the Nation is rarely blessed by the stimulating presence of that class of gentlemen whose chief delight is in tearing to pieces anything that remotely hints of any imitation of European "effeteness." But a correspondent in the last Nation really states the essential points of the argument most clearly. The grounds of the discussion are simple enough, but are too often lost sight of by undiscriminating...
...Whose manner was yearning and mild...
...himself a college-bred man, and having no affiliations with Harvard, placed his son in the university. When I asked him why he had selected Harvard as the place for his son's education, he replied: "In my practice I have observed that a large number of men, whose principles I respected, whose manners I liked, and whose idea of professional honor and public duty commended themselves to me, were graduates of Harvard...