Word: youngest
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...athletic activities in College and the Senior Adviser system. There are lots of other things in College besides athletics. The first thing is Phi Beta Kappa. Next in importance are the various publications. Besides the CRIMSON and Lampoon there are the Advocate, Monthly and the Illustrated, which is the youngest publication in College. Then there is the Musical Review for any who are musically inclined. For those who can sing, there is the Glee Club, and for those who can speak there is the Debating Club, which takes part each year in a triangular debate with Yale and Princeton...
...Number of the Illustrated which makes it a fitting introduction to the College year, an attractive welcome to the Class of 1920. Starting with the cover, a line of "lambs" before the Bursar's lair, the number continues to give promise of a successful year for the University's youngest publication...
Ernest Martin Hopkins, of Newton, Dartmouth 1901, was yesterday unanimously elected president of Dartmouth College by the board of trustees. When President elect Hopkins takes up his office he will be one of the youngest college presidents in the country. He will succeed President Ernest Fox Nichols, whose resignation takes effect on June...
...foils and the other with duelling swords. Russell has an excellent chance of winning, for last Friday night he captured the National Amateur Duelling Sword Championship in New York. He is the only undergraduate in any college that has ever reached the finals in the latter tournament and the youngest man that ever won the title. Tonight he will meet such experienced fencers as Dr. F. H. Allen M.D. '07, O. D. McLaughlin, and G. B. Wilbur...
...sestet with the "Imperial hosts upon disconsolate seas." "The Tree of Stars" and "A Renaissance Picture" by Mr. Poore are both of them charming poems. Perhaps the former is the more exquisite, but the latter rouses our critical attention. It is so strangely in the manner of Cuthbert Wright, youngest of the small group of real American poets, as to make me look again at the author's name. Have we here an example of that imitation of other artists so instinctive and so admirable in the beginner? Or is it possible that the same milieu is producing again...