Word: fellows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...basic purpose of these insignia is to increase the number of a man's friends among his fellow classmen. The last part of the career of a class is certainly the most difficult of all times to attempt to widen a man's acquaintance artificially. At best, it can only result in a bowing acquaintance with a score or so of men who you had no idea were members of your class. Moreover, a class has become definitely sifted into groups by Senior year. A man's friends are made and he will inevitably move more or less completely...
Exactly the reverse is true of Freshmen. The first year is the natural and logical time to meet one's fellow-classmen. At this period, before groups have become crystallized, bowing acquaintance very easily and quickly ripens into friendship. It is important that Freshmen should be able to know their classmates, even if only by sight. In many ways success or failure in forming friendships in Freshman year is likely to determine the pleasure and profit to be gained from the four years in College...
...funeral of Francis Cabot Lowell, LL.D., of the class of 1876, Fellow of Harvard College and Judge of the United States Circuit Court, will be held in King's Chapel, Boston, this morning at 11 o'clock...
...first of a series of lectures under the William Belden Noble Foundation, on "Civilization at the Cross-Roads" was given by Rev. J.N. Figgis, Litt.D., of Mirfield, England, Honorary Fellow of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, last night. The title of the lecture was "The Intellectual Chaos...
...state legislature, in which he held important positions on various committees. In 1898 he was appointed to the District Court bench, and in 1905 became justice of the United States Circuit Court. Judge Lowell was for several years a member of the Board of Overseers, previous to becoming a Fellow of the Corporation, a position which he was still holding. He was also a trustee of the Peabody Museum...