Word: booked
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...wish to usher for the Brown game are to sign up in the blue book at Leavitt and Peirce's before tomorrow at 5 o'clock. Every one muse sign for himself, as no proxies will be allowed. An entirely new list will be made...
...wish to usher at Brown game, whether they have usher at other games or not, are to sign in the blue book at Leavitt and Pierre before Wednesday at 5 o'clock...
When we re-read books which interested us intensely a long time ago, we learn the origin of many of our "peculiar and original" ideas and prejudices. We, furthermore, realize the strong influence an absorbing book has on character and how dangerous it would be to ourselves, to the community and to the world at large, if we read the biographies of library vandals, ticket scalpers and horse thieves. --The Pennsylanian...
...through the publication of "The Harvard Volunteers in Europe." This volume is composed of letters written by Harvard men from the French and British lines, scrawled off for the most part at the front with no thought of future publication; and consequently conveying the freshest kind of pictures. The book carries with it, from Europe, boom of guns, the whirring of aeroplane motors and the signs of dying men-the whole set down in the vivid and picturesque words of young men who have seen great things...
Suffice it to say that nowhere can one find a better picture of the war, viewed from all sides and from above, than in this book. It takes its place with Gallishaw's "Trenching at Gallipoli," Sheehan's "A Volunteer Poilu" and "Friends of France," as part of the library which every man, and above all, every Harvard man, should read