Word: colors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Profoundly regret inability being with you in New Haven today stop Hope we roll up big score am listening in on the game stop Invite any and all members of the Harvard team who may be in Europe next summer to be my guests in Munich, irrespective race, color, or previous condition of servitude. (Signed) Hanfstaengl...
Among his memberships were The Revton Society of Water Color Painting, the Boston Society of Architects, the Harvard Club, and the Faculty Club of Harvard...
...flightless sea bird, slightly smaller than a goose and more docile. An expert swimmer and diver, its feet hurt so much that it often lay stretched prone on the rocks. The Auk laid only one egg a year but no two eggs were ever alike in size, shape or color...
When an American sets out to found a college, he hunts first for a hill. John Harvard was an Englishman and indifferent to high places. The result is that Harvard has become a university of vast proportions and no color. Yale flounders about among the New Haven shops, trying to rise above them. The Harkness Memorial tower is successful; otherwise the university smells of trade. If Yale had been built on a hill, it would probably be far less important and much more interesting. --Percy Marks in the Brown Daily Herald...
...Every week each "X" writes Managing Editor Charles Colebaugh of Collier's a breezy, detailed memorandum on business, politics, public sentiment in his section. The editors select three or four of the most interesting reports, have them mimeographed by a process which reproduces their exact original form (color of copy paper and typewriter ink, marginal notes, penciled corrections, etc.). To maintain the illusion of inside confidence, the scribbled initials of CC (Colebaugh), B (Editorial Director Thomas Hambly Beck) and WLC (Editor William Ludlow Chenery) appear at the top of each report. The week's selections are stapled together...