Word: cooped
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...been made the Cambridge agent for the Photographic Department of Skyways, Inc. During the fall this concern has been taking pictures of Harvard College the Yard and Soldiers Field from the air, and some excellent views have been obtained. These pictures will probably be on display at the Coop this week or next...
...radio announcer, the man whose voice, carefully guarded by the proper cigarettes, carries the news to a listening world, is located in a little coop of his own at the back of the press box. Because he is within the walls of his pen, he does not hear the dictates of the announcer so readily, and has to rely more on his own judgment or identification...
...marrying Alumnae of Radcliffe attract Harvard husbands. But five per cent of them reach out after M. I. T. men. This fact must be considered significant. Why should Harvard men be favored in such preponderance? The obvious answer is to be found in the superiority of the Coop and Widener Library as trysting places over the barren laboratories of the, Technological Institute...
...Potter Lage '30, New York City, and Frederick Herman Gade '31, New York City, are the three undergraduates nominated to represent their respective classes as directors of The Harvard Cooperative Society during the year 1928-1929, it was announced by G. E. Cole, G. B. '12, manager of the Coop yesterday. At the same time Mr. Cole made known the complete list of nominations for stockholders, officers and directors for the forthcoming year as proposed recently at the annual meeting of the Coop stockholders...
...People are clamoring for the booklet," stated G. E. Cole G.B. '16, manager of the Coop yesterday afternoon, "and the Cooperative Society is in the embarrassing position of not being able to meet the demand. We have hounded the editors for the precious little volume, but it looks like another miscalculation of publication values. We have turned away 30 or 40 people this afternoon who refused to believe that just another first edition had become history. Many more copies could have met a ready reception from Harvard...