Word: byronic
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Davis, R. D. Gerould, Philip Gossler, Percy Jenkins, Corliss Lamont, J. E. Merrill, J. P. Menks, Malcolm Morse, Campbell Newhall, C. K. Pope, W. J. Reycroft, P. A. Byron, manager...
...Frank Spooner Churchill, Mrs. George Washington Cram, Mrs. Calvert Crary, Mrs. Howland Davis, Mrs. John Villiers Farwell, Mrs. Henry M. Faxon, Mrs. John Huston Finley, Mrs. Hollis French, Mrs. J. Mott Hallowell, Mrs. Franklin Hamilton, Mrs. William S. Holbrook, Mrs. Chester A. Howe, Mrs. Henry Bauer Humphrey, Mrs. Byron S. Hurlburt, Mrs. Henry Parsons King Jr. Mrs. Tarrant Putnam King, Mrs. George L. Kitridge, Mrs. Thomas W. Lamont, Mrs. Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Mrs. Robert A. MacFadden, Mrs. Charles MacVeagh, Mrs. Joseph Alexander McCord, Mrs. John Murray Mitchell Jr., Mrs. Dennis F. O'Connell, Mrs. Henry Parkman Jr., Mrs. Edward Lily...
Professor Yeomans has been associated with the Dean's office for nine years. From 1912 to 1916 he was Assistant Dean in charge of Freshmen. In 1916 he was appointed Dean of Harvard College in succession to Professor Byron S. Hurlbut, '87. He has held the position on the understanding that he would serve only for a limited period and he has now asked to be relieved of his administrative duties at the end of the current year in order that he may spend next year on sabbatical leave of absence returning in 1922-23 to the teaching of government...
...times to display the enthusiasm commonly exhibited elsewhere is receiving visiting teams; the premature refusal on the part of the Student Council to sponsor the conference might also have been interpreted as evidence of coldness. By fostering friendly intercourse between "courteous host and all-approving guest" --to use Byron's words--, Harvard will help to dispel any illusions the country at large may entertain as to her supposedly unfriendly attitude...
...Byron has said, "Tis pleasant sure to see one's name in print." Something of this feeling must have found its way into the hearts of those undergraduates who are responsible for the latest University publication--"The Aristocrat." To the rest of us, such a form of pleasure may seem to be a rather expensive one; but then, we are not budding geniuses or embryo laureates who will go to any lengths in search of some means of "self-expression". The bourgeoisie can only watch and wonder...