Word: albums
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With the final work now in progress, the Senior Album will be published on Friday, May 15, if present plans are carried out, Deric Nusbaum '36, chairman, announced yesterday...
Thus Glidden is opening a drive which will last until a week from today when the Album goes to press. Advertising, House solicitors, and statistics are the main lines of attack. Since the Album only prints the number of copies desired, men who do not enter their subscriptions this week are liable to sacrifice their opportunity to own one of these volumes...
John J. Slocum, in charge of editorial matter, is lacking many of the articles which are listed in the table of contents. Since he considers the inclusion of this material essential, the Album cannot go to press until his whim is satisfied. Consequently, he will conduct his own drive this week to evoke literary output from the moguls of undergraduate activities...
Anybody who needs in ichthyologist, a marine, an actuarian, a piano tuner, a vagrant, or a grocer should consult the Senior Class. What is more, these are not the only unusual careers chosen by the 1075 members of the Class of 1936 who will appear in the Album...
...first man in the Album is Charles F. Aber, Jr. and the last in Hyman W. Zussman. The longest lifeblank which was received was that of Francis J. Whitfield, class poet. There was one member who concentrated in romance, John Clement, hockey player. There was another in Walter Lawrence who makes the Dionne quintuplets look sick by proving that a man born last July can handle the Senior year at Harvard with a minimum of difficulty. Richard M. Starr caused the greatest concern by announcing that his only home is Kirkland House. Orville H. Emmons reported that...