Word: coverly
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...award is to be made in the fall of 1913 to a man entering the Freshman class, and is to be held for a single year. This sum of $300 will be liberal enough to adequately cover the heavy travelling expenses to and from College from distant states. "Thereafter, men of ability can secure other College aid or employment sufficient to carry them forward. If there be no well-qualified candidate for admission to the Freshman class, then the scholarship may be awarded to any applicant from such state who shall be approved by the Scholarship Committee of the Associated...
...will not be accepted unless a signature card has been filed. Checks and money orders should be made payable to the Harvard Athletic Association. No person may make more than one application for this game, but persons wishing to sit together may enclose their applications under the same cover. Blanks may be obtained at the H. A. A. Office and at Leavitt & Peirce's. Tickets will be mailed not earlier than November...
...November issue of the Harvard Illustrated Magazine has all the interest and advantage of timeliness dealing as it does, most pertinently with our immediate political situation. The note for the issue is already struck on the cover which bears an excellent print of the great steel dome, erected over the Capitol at Washington during the troublous years of the Civil...
...complete list of watchers at the Law School polls in the Austin Hall smoking room is as follows: 9-10, G. T. Vought 3L., (A); H. R. Cover uL., (B); C. D. Amos 2L., (C). 10-11, F. S. Wyner 3L., (A); B. S. Ulrich 3L., (B); H. R. Cover uL., (C). 11-12, R. S. Holmes 3L., (A); R. R. Eldredge 2L., (B); T. McCall 1L., (C). 12-1, R. T. O'Neil 3L., (A); A. S. Olmsted 1G., (B); H. M. Stephens 3L., (C). 2-3, P. C. Calhoun 3L., (A); H. W. Reynolds...
That perennial subject of argument, Freshman dormitories, will probably cover more pages of English A paper than ever this year. However, it is hoped that the Freshmen will not confine all their ideas to the prescribed pad. They can perform a real service to the University and to succeeding classes by co-operating with the Office in its attempt to arrange the new dormitories so as to satisfy all sorts of requirements. As Freshmen will be compelled to live in them, it is essential that the dormitories conform to the desires and requirements of the whole class. We therefore urge...