Word: fined
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tufts--Hastings, c.f.; Childs, c.f.; Miller, c.f.; Verge, 2b., l.f.; McCarthy, 1b.; Zapolski, 3b.; Hornig, s.s.; Marchand, l.f., 2b.; Fine, r.f; Martin, c.; Hatch...
...Khan. The pictures are better than the text, but of what sporting paper, is this not true? Leslie Cheek '31 supplies an uproarious cover, and the whole staff has been busy making composographs and very good composographs they have turned out to be. There is something bold and fine in the conception of a pair of apteryxes defying gunners on the top of the chimneys of the Cambridge Gas Company. There is a charming and not heavily exaggerated view of the Cape Cod Canal; and the aviation photographs strike a not which is but seldom sounded in the current rotogravures...
...Harvard singers will give a public performance at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts; later in the month a program will be rendered at the home of Mrs. Jack Gardner; and on May 30 Harvard will join with the Radcliffe Choral Society, under the direction of G. W. Woodworth '24, in a concert which will constitute part of the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Radcliffe's founding. The Glee Club is at present rehearsing the "Hymn to Jesus" by Gustav Hoist for presentation at the last named concert...
...problem to the Duke & Duchess of York than to the parents of most three-year-olds. For example, on their tour of Australia (TIME, Jan. 17, et seq.) they were obliged to accept and bring home "for Baby Betty" no less than three tons of toys and precisely 20 fine squawking parrots. The Duchess cannot appear at a bazaar, lay a cornerstone, or address the Girl Guides (of which she is one) without having pressed upon her-"for Baby Betty, the darling!"-everything from four-leaf clovers offered by grubby children to the historic lace diaper presented by a beaming...
According to President Lowell, the courses realized by students to be easier than average "lower the standard for everything". He gave as examples in this connection, although with no discredit to the men who gave them, the courses in Geology and Fine Arts given by the late Professors Shaeler and Norton, respectively. Speaking of this, President Lowell declared, "Any courses which are regarded by the students as distinctly easier than the others demoralize the whole system. One must be very careful that if one has a course that is more attractive than others, one makes this harder, thereby keeping...