Word: dress
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...invited to the dinner. Notices of the dinner have been sent to the former, and the latter may obtain tickets on application to Professor W. G. Howard, 39 Kirkland street, or H. D. Smith '21 at the Crimson Building. The price of the dinner will be $2.50. Informal dress will be worn at the dinner...
...final results of the campaign are as follows: Suits, 15 Pants, 54 Coats, 53 Vests, 41 Overcoats, 12 Hats and caps, 38 Shoes, pairs, 89 Bath robes, 2 Blanket, 1 Raincoats, 2 Collars, 127 Ties, 161 Socks, pairs, 26 Shirts, 69 Underclothes, 81 Dress suits, 8 Magazines, tons, 2 Books...
...this meeting. The Endowment Committee needs the help of forty of these men in the distribution and collection of pledge cards. Seats (free) are reserved for such volunteers, who should report at the Hall (Massachusetts avenue entrance) at five minutes to eight on the evening of the meeting. Formal dress is not necessary. I shall be glad to have the names of such volunteers before Monday evening next. Write to me at 23 Hawthorn street, or telephone Cambridge 142-W. PROFESSOR R. A. DALY. November...
...real world where he is to live. It is not difficult to make out a bill of particulars. The college student is characterized by a fine and lofty indifference to everything outside his own personal affairs and the activities of his own college campus. He affects peculiarities of dress and manner, . . . wants to be seen and heard, whereas the successful man of the world moves about inconspicuously. He is still the center of his own world. This is what makes him . . . "an opinionated little cuss." He is as full of argument as an egg is of meat. He lives...
...plays of Mr. Maughan's that we have seen we have discovered that usually the first act moves rapidly while the succeeding acts are but clever repartee. Therefore when the second act begins with an amusing but not altogether relevant scene in which Lady Frederick bests her dunning dress-maker we expected that from then on we were to be amused rather than thrilled. But we were agreeably disappointed. The action, mingled with dialogue, epigrammatical and quick, was soon caught up again, and the play progressed surely and rapidly to the conclusion of the story...