Word: blue
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...meet with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to be held in the Stadium on Wednesday afternoon at 4.30 o'clock, will be open to all members of both the University and Freshman track teams. Entries for this meet should be made immediately in the blue-books posted at Leavitt & Peirce's, the Locker Building, and the Freshman dormitories. The events will include 100-yard dash, 440-yard dash, 3-4-mile run, 1 1-2-mile run, 80-yard high hurdles and all field events. As this is a practice meet there will be no scoring but ribbons will...
Arthur Sylvester Peabody '16, of Malden, has been appointed captain of the second tennis team. As the first game being arranged for the team is on Wednesay, April 28, it is necessary to hasten the trials. Therefore all men wishing to try for the team must sign in the blue-book provided for the purpose at Leavitt & Peirce's before 6 o'clock this evening. A tournament among those who sign will be begun tomorrow and finished on the Tuesday before the first game...
Entries for the second dual track meet with Massachusetts Institute of Technology to be held in the Stadium Wednesday, April 21, at 2.30 o'clock may be made in blue-books at Leavitt & Peirce's, Hemenway Gymnasium, and Soldiers Field. This meet will be open to all track men, both of the University and Freshman teams, from both institutions. The University relay teams will not compete, however, as they are going to Philadelphia for the Pennsylvania Relay Carnival the following Saturday...
...good as to arouse a desire that the signature W. C. B. might be substituted for cer- tain well-known initials in the critical columns of a certain Boston newspaper. Mr. Murdock's short poem, although it has its "amethyst and pearl," its "gold and blue," is inspired by true feeling and possesses true significance. Perhaps the best thing in the number is Mr. Jacobs's war-sonnet, a vital and powerful satire, and the winner of the Advocate competition. C. R. POST...
France, on the other hand, has a great ideal, the "blue sky limit" as M. LeRoux phrased it, which looks toward the uplift of humanity and the altruism of man, not the "objects on the ground" of the Germans. France is not seeking aggrandizement but rather the protection of her women and children, the preservation of her homes...