Word: crimsons
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Lieutenant William Cheney Brown, Jr., '14, of Hartford, Conn., a former president of the CRIMSON died at Washington, D. C., on Sunday in his twenty-seventh year. He was attached to the Embarkation Service of the Quartermaster Corps...
While in the University Lieutenant Brown, besides being President of the CRIMSON, was very prominent in under graduate activities. Upon his graduation in 1914, he entered the Law School and received his degree of LL.B. in 1917 before entering the service. He was president of the Harvard Law Review...
Members of the Class of 1919 will vote at the CRIMSON Building today between 9 and 6 o'clock for a Secretary, Class Committee, Photograph Committee and Class Day Committee. The nominations for these offices appear in the box below on this page. In addition, the Senior Class will choose their First and Second Marshals. In the elections held for Marshals last Tuesday a tie for First Marshal resulted between Henry Corwin Flower, Jr., and Robert Ellsworth Gross, and it was therefore decided that another vote should be cast for these two men. Of these two men the one obtaining...
...following Juniors will act as watchers at the Senior polls in the CRIMSON Building tomorrow at the times indicated: 9-10, E. A. Bacon, W. P. Belknap; 10-11, E. Cabot, H. D. Costigan; 11-12, M. H. Dill, J. Harrison; 12-1, J. G. King, J. B. Mabon; 1-2, E. Lovering, R. M. Sanders; 2-3, H. DeC. Ward, J. U. Nef; 3-4, J. S. Higgins, H. F. Gibbs; 4-5, M. Heard, F. Hibbard; 5-6, S. N. Stevens, I. S. Randall...
...activities. That such a need has ceased to exist we should hardly care to assert. Nevertheless with the development of student life and equipment for student organizations we must admit that the special functions which the Union once fulfilled are now to a large extent better fulfilled elsewhere. The CRIMSON has moved to more adequate quarters in a building of its own. The Reading Rooms in Widener Library naturally present themselves to one's mind before the Reading Room in the Union. As a gathering place for out of town students and for occasional class meetings it scarcely justifies itself...