Word: darke
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Faculties, and guests of the Corporation are requested to assemble in front of Massachusetts Hall at 9.45 A. M., and alumni of not less than twenty-five years' standing who intend to join the procession should assemble in the same place. The candidates for degrees, in gowns or dark clothes, will assemble under the direction of their respective marshals at 9.45 o'clock, according to the following plan: All speakers and A.A., near the east end of Holworthy Hall; candidates for S.B. near the west end of Holoworthy; candidates for A.M., Ph.D., S.B. in the various branches of Engineering...
...less important is that only a few months ago no sane follower of track would have been willing to concede that Harvard had a chance of coming within even five places of winning the intercollegiates; indeed it was considered a temeritous critic who advanced Harvard as a possible dark horse on the very eve of the preliminaries. So much for the victory as a reversal of prediction. It is only when we consider the meet in respect to the future of Harvard track that we realize how much was done last Saturday...
...Milne, author of "Mr. Pim Passes By," which recently met with success in New York, will be staged in a sunny English morning room, with walls of yellow and orange, making an attractive setting for the furniture, which is upholstered in blue. For Maeterlinck's "The Blind," the dark, glommy scenery, after the style of Arthur Reckham's executions, will be used. The lighting effects will tend to throw the actors into sharp silhouette...
...modern age," said Professor Grandaunt, "with all its inventions and material benefits to mankind, we are too likely to look into the past as into a dark night. But the past ages have made their contributions, and none so abundantly as the Renaissance. Of the great social, intellectual and spiritual influences of this splendid time our age has come to recognize Daute as the one adequate representative...
...dark clouds in the present railroad situation," concluded Professor Cunningham, "are merely incidents in the painful period of reconstruction. The Transportation Act has not failed. Under a resumption of normal business conditions, and with the beginning of the plan providing for consolidations which will eliminate the disturbing factor of the weak roads, I believe that the railroad problem will be well on toward a satisfactory solution...