Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...over the club is as active as any homogeneous foc'sle well can be. Twice in the last week it has burst into print in American journals, and has survived, proof enough of a strong constitution. What is more it has burst generously. First it offered, through the Alumni Bulletin, a prize for the best suggestion of a subject for discussion offered by March 1, 1924. Now it continues its intellectual curiosity and challenges the "Advocate" to the tune of 100 dollars for its most striking article of the year. The prize will go to the writer who has produced...
...opinion of many officers of the Associated Harvard clubs and other prominent graduates of the University there has long been a real need for such a special issue, supplementing the Alumni Bulletin, and intended for the personal use of graduates and for distribution to secondary and preparatory schools by the local clubs, as well as for use in the clubs themselves. Such a need the CRIMSON proposes to satisfy, offering at the same time a medium through which the families of men at College may keep in touch with their sons and the course of events at the University...
...events at the University and more particularly in giving to schoolboys an acquaintance with colleges in general and Harvard in particular, the CRIMSON feels that it will be performing a new and valuable function. With graduates and clubs it does not wish to supplant but merely to supplement the Bulletin. With schools it does not wish to proselyte but merely to give the schoolboy, accustomed to the lurid and often unintelligent reports in the metropolitan press of the country, a truer picture of the facts and events at a great university, which happens to be Harvard. It hopes that...
...Under the circumstances," he writes to the Alumni Bulletin, "the club has decided to offer a prize for the best suggestion received by March 1, 1924, for a subject on which we can relieve ourselves of the telling phrases that we have been saving up for the last few years. At the option of the winner the prize will consist of a solid gold ivory mounted betel nut outfit or of a quart bottle of Haig and Haig (risk of entry to be borne by the winner...
Died. John Revelstoke Rathom, 56, editor and general manager of The Providence Journal and The Evening Bulletin and President since 1922 of the New England Daily Newspaper Association. (See page...