Word: everetts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...when Ashley suddenly shot the ball into the cage for his team's first point. In the third period Chittenden, charging upon Goalkeeper Salmon, who was holding the ball, drove him back into the goal for a score, and with the elevens deadlocked four minutes before the final whistle, Everett and Anderson scored in quick succession...
HARVARD 1930 YALE 1930 Douglas l.e. r.e. Everett Storey l.t. r.t. Ladd Stewart l.g. r.g. Greene Bigelow c. c. Ward Ticknor r.g. l.g. Robbins Barrett r.t. l.t. Marting Lewis r.e. l.e. McEwen Wetmore q.b. q.b. Beyer Holbrook l.h.b. r.h.b. Walker Mason r.h.b. l.h.b. Wilson Hitch f.b. f.b. Bendere...
Nearly half a century later, in the administration of President Edward Everett, it was restored, and has been there ever since. It was once more possible to be for truth and the Church simultaneously. The Church had changed, in New England at any rate; and men's attitudes toward it, at Harvard, had changed accordingly. Since then the religious sentiments of Harvard has tended toward loyalty to the kind of church that is not afraid with any amazement, regardless of the discoveries that may be made in the search for truth...
...following year Rev. Edward Everett was elected professor on this foundation. Five years later, in 1820, after the death of Samuel Eliot '60 of Boston, it was announced that he had been the founder of this professorship. The Corporation then voted to call the foundation the "Eliot Professorship of Greek Literature," and further, that "they are apprized of Mr. Eliot's sincere reluctance at the idea of receiving a posthumous distinction of this nature, in consequence of his beneficence to the University; but that they are also satisfied that he would submit his private wishes in this particular to public...
...Coolidge wrought this evil upon them- given his best interview of all time, not to one of their number, but to an angelic interloper from another estate? An interloper who had then sold his treasure to their newspapers, via the Associated Press! Through ever-ready Secretary Everett Sanders, President Coolidge made answer as best he could to the "boys" (as Washington correspondents have delighted in being called since the blustery days of Roosevelt). He used up only half a sheet of letter-paper and signed his name. The wording of this missive remained unpublished, as did the "boys' " letter...