Word: craige
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Beside this the Department of Military Science in the University has secured three new instructors this year. They are Major L. A. Craig, Captain William Spence, and Captain J. B. Wogan. All these men play polo and have agreed to join Captain Clark in the formation of an officers' team to play games in Boston. This team should be able to give the University some good competition in practice matches...
With the departure of Captain R. W. Daniels to Fort Sill, , and Captain B. H. Perry to Fort Benning, Georgia, the Department of Military Science secures three new men--Major L. A. Craig, Captain J. B. Wogan, and Captain William Spence. These new men will be stationed at the University for a period of four years. All three are graduates of the Military Academy at West Point, and thoroughly familiar with the problem, of military traning in the college...
...Major Craig has been awarded the Croix de Guerre with palm for exceptionally meritorious service in France. Captain Spence was the youngest Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Army during the war. Captain Wogan comes to the University with a brilliant war record. All of these men play polo, and are interested in the development of the game among students at Harvard...
...rested on his sculls in comfort, reflected joyfully that, as in 1920, he had won the Diamond Sculls. In 1922, Beresford was nosed out by Walter M. Hoover of Duluth. Last year, he did not reach the final heat. This year, the man laboring after him was K. N. Craig, of Pembroke College, Cambridge. In the eight's final for the Grand Challenge Cup, six feet separated the victorious bow of the Leander shell from a boatful of "Tabbies" (Jesus College, Cambridge). On the stroke thwart of the Leader boat sat W. Palmer ("Pinkie") Mellen, a thoroughly anglicized young...
...books, altar carpets, stained glass, tiled floors, sanctuary lamps, "full of traditional design and symbolism but signifying little." There are interesting photographs of architectural projects as well as the architectural manifestations of the exposition itself. The art of the Theatre is more historical than contemporary in import, as Gordon Craig, Lovat Eraser and others of the modern theorists are absent. There are contemporary drawings of David Garrick, and stage designs by John Webb and Inigo Jones, 1650, a Shakespeare first folio, the program of an amateur performance of the Merry Wives in which Dickens and Cruikshank took part, and delightful...