Word: california
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Full details are given of the "Harvard Trip to California" and there is a sensible article on "The Clubs and the University," which does not refer to the local sotto voce organizations, but to the graduate Harvard Clubs. The writer, J. D. Phillips '97, advocates the setting aside of a day when various Alumni Associations and clubs shall come to Cambridge to visit the University at work. He wants the day to be academic in its nature and only casually athletic or social. Dean Hurlbut has an article on "Conduct and Scholarship of the Year" taken from his annual report...
...Halstead, Kans.; Frank Arthur Bowes, A.B. (Holy Cross Coll.) 1910, of Waterbury, Conn.; Horace Stuart Cragin, S.B. (Amherst Coll.) 1910, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; George Henry Gillette, A.B. (Cornell Coll.) 1910, of Bayport, N. Y.; Michele Nigro, A.B. 1910, of Revere; Oswald Hope Robertson, S.B. (Univ. of California) 1910, S.M. (ibid) 1912, of Berkley, Cal.; William Lloyd Shannon, A.B. (McGill Univ.) 1909, M.D., C.M. (ibid) 1911, of Vancouver, B.C.; Harold Wentworth Stevens, A.B. (Bates Coll.) 1906, of Saco, Me.; Arthur Lawrence Washburn, A.B. 1910, of New York...
...University headquarters, which will be maintained, through the entire duration of the Fair, a man will be in charge who will have a record of the exact addresses of all Harvard men in California, in order to aid strangers in finding their friends in the community...
...sixth down the list, Yale is seventeenth, and Princeton twenty-sixth in the list, while Columbia has not only attained the front rank, but got so far ahead of it that there seems almost to be a vacancy in the second place. Of the universities which come next, California now impressive with 8,180 students, and Chicago with its 7,131, were almost unknown in the palmy days of the "Big Four." But this change in order does not argue decadence by any means, in those universities which formerly led. They have had uninterrupted prosperity, as a rule...
...make competition in the relay races nearly even, the tentative entries have been divided into eighteen classes this year. The major group includes Cambridge, Chicago, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Illinois, Michigan, Oxford, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and Yale. The other important groups are: Class 2-California, Leland Stanford, McGill, Minnesota, Missouri, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Purdue, Southern California. Toronto; Class 18-Annapolis and West Point. The colleges in the minor classes are grouped mainly according to geographical location or size of enrollment