Word: william
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...following have won their Freshman baseball numerals: Richard Cedric Babson, of Cambridge; Robert Murray Blackall, of Cambridge; Sherman Hoar Bowles, of Springfield; Thomas Joseph Campbell, of Gardner; William Merritt Conant, Jr., of Boston; John Rollin Desha, of Hilo, Hawaii; Harry Reginald Howe, of Watertown; Arthur James, Kelly, of Roxbury; Joseph Patrick Kennedy, of East Boston; Robert Sturgis Potter, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Richard Bowditch Wigglesworth, of Milton; Eric Seymour Winston, of New York...
...University has received from Mr. William H. Knight '03, of Hopedale, a gift of $1,040, the income of which is to be used each year to support a prize for a composition in instrumental music. The prize is to be called the "George Arthur Knight Prize," in memory of George Arthur Knight, late of the Class of 1907, and is to be awarded by a committee of the Division of Music...
...Illustrated would go near the Gymnasium! Kilpatrick's half-mile should scarcely be called a collegiate record. It was made in the international meet of 1895 when he ran for the New York A. C. And what bright has struck the high jump in these latter days? William Bird Page made his record of six feet, four inches more than a score of years ago. The Harvard record of six feet, two and one quarter inches was made by Fearing '93 in February, 1891, in the Irvington Street Armory. We believe that he jumped in sneakers. We must not leave...
...leading article W. L. Stoddard deals with the present burning--shall we say sizzling?--question in academic and literary circles, the recent discovery by William Stone Booth of acrostic signatures of Francis Bacon systematically embodied in the poems the sonnets and all of the plays usually attributed to William Shakespeare, and elsewhere. He foresees that the acceptance of Mr. Booth's discoveries by, the mathematician and historian will lead to the rewriting of the history of English literature of the period shortly before and after 1600, and to the destruction of the modern Shakespeare myth. Let us hope that...
Following is the program for the Pop Concert in Symphony Hall this evening: Italian Night. 1. Coronation March, Meyerbeer 2. Overture, "La Gazza Ladra," Rossini 3. Selection from "Rigoletto," Verdi 4. Ballet Music from "La Gioconda," Ponchielli 5. Overture, "William Tell," Rossini Solo 'Cello, Mr. J. Keller. 6. Selection from "Madame Butterfly," Puccini 7. Sextette from "Lucia," Donizetti 8. Selection from "La Boheme," Puccini 9. Suite, "Peer Gynt," Grieg 10. Selection from "The Red Mill," Herbert 11. Waltz, "Jolly Fellows," Volstedt 12. March, "Frisch d'rauf los," Blon