Word: booked
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...today. The competition, which has been going on since the middle of October, has been open to all members of the Senior and Junior Classes, membership in the Club being unnecessary. Under the new ruling established this year not more than two men may collaborate on the book, and two on the score. Prizes will be awarded to the winning authors and composers who will be elected to the Club, if not already members. The successful composers to be eligible for election to the club or for receiving prizes, must have at least six pieces accepted. The manuscripts must...
...Only two persons may combine on the book of the play, and the music also must be composed by no more than two. In order to be eligible for election or for receiving a prize, the composed must have at least six musical numbers accepted. All manuscripts must be type-written and must be in the hands of F. H. Cabot, Jr., '17 by January...
...militaristic and Switzerland unarmed, or whether he similarly holds that umbrellas are the cause of rain, we do not know; but he scorns Professor Perry for not agreeing with him. One is forced to assume that he was not allowed to read Mr. LaFarge's clever little essay on book-reviewing, which appears directly above "B. D. A's" Philippic, and applies admirably to that effort--but perhaps it also applies to this effort...
Although the millennium has not been reached, we do not believe that things have changed. The money line of distinction is no longer of great importance. Good fellowship is placed higher than a substantial check-book and an expensive motor car. Wealth still makes the path to popularity easier in certain circles, yet most of us at Harvard as well as most of us in America try to estimate men by their character rather than by their pocketbooks. We believe that "a man's a man for a' that...
Fresh from the English trenches in France, Captain Ian Hay Beith has come to America to resume in person his lively and picturesque narrative of the "First Hundred Thousand--still first", as he touchingly puts it at the close of his book, but, alas, no longer The Hundred Thousand. At the beginning of the war he enlisted in a well-known Highland regiment, in spite of the fact that his thirty-eight years put him almost over the age limit for military service. Then came six months of arduous training at Aldershot with the other members of the motley collection...