Word: finalities
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Three selections from Handel, Hornpipe, Minnet, and Allegro, will be played this morning in Appleton Chapel for ten minutes following the service. This is the last of the serious of organ recitals which have been given daily since the commencement of final examinations...
...winner of the CRIMSON'S annual school newspaper trophy will not be announced until next fall, it was made known last night. The total number of competitors for the award this year, over double that of last year, has necessitated a delay, in the final choice of the winner. The contestants have been narrowed to nine, and the winner will be named shortly after the opening of college in the fall...
...members of the Harvard-Yale tennis team, which will face the combined Oxford-Cambridge netmen early in August were definitely announced yesterday following a test match between L. H. Gordon '27 and Arthur in-graham Jr. '30 to determine the third Harvard match. The final choice of Harvard-Yale players for the English invasion is as follows: J. F. W. Whitbeck '27, L. H. Gordon '27, and M. I. Hill '30, of Harvard, and Watson, McGlinn, and Reed of Yale...
...CRIMSON'S recent canvass of student feeling toward a University dining hall has been taken as the final criterion of the lack of present interest in the project. On May 26 3000 pledge cards were sent out to all members of the three lower classes in the college and to all graduate students except those in the Business and Medical Schools. So far only 125 of these cards have been returned with signatures of men willing to eat in the proposed dining hall. This number falls far short of the 500 figure set by President Lowell as a necessary preliminary...
This letter is addressed to you as a member of Psychology 9. A peculiarly outrageous instance of mutilation has recently occured at the Library in connection with this course. Within a few days the eight final pages of the article on Aesthetics have been torn from the reading-room copy of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, presumably by some member of the course. Such an act will, I am sure, be promptly and vigorously condemned by every one of the other 35 members of Psychology 9, and even, I hope, by the who who did it, when he reflects that his deed...