Word: georgians
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...Illustrated will hold its eighteenth annual banquet at the Hotel Lenox this evening at 6.30 o'clock. It had previously planned to have it at the Georgian. Before going into Boston the board will meet at its sanctum on Holyoke street at 5.30, and choose new editors for 1916-17. There will be graduates and others to speak at the dinner and plans for the future of the magazine will be discussed...
...eighteenth annual dinner and election of officers of the Illustrated will take place at the Hotel Georgian, Monday evening at 7 o'clock. Mr. F. W. C. Hersey '99, of the English department; B. Kline '06, magazine editor of the Boston Transcript; H. Brightman '11, assistant advertising manager of Filene's, and C. H. Smith 1L., president of the Illustrated last year, will be among the speakers...
...advise them; and already this new shop has an extremely interesting collection of rare editions and fine bindings. The greatest field for this new Yale institution will be in second-hand books of the 18th and early 19th centuries. Good editions of the writers of the Queen Anne and Georgian ages may be purchased reasonably and the time is not far away when the upper room of the shop will be stacked with old authors whom all know or should know...
...photograph in yesterday's paper shows the general outward appearance of the recently-completed structure. The building is two stories high in front, this portion being constructed in Georgian style of Harvard brick, with limestone trimmings. This arrangement makes a large roof-garden over the rear section of the building, leading directly off from the editor's sanctum, which occupies the entire second floor of the front of the building. The ground floor of the front portion contains the offices of the president and business manager. The middle portion provides quarters for the news and editorial staff of the CRIMSON...
...building has a three-story Georgian facade, of Harvard brick, laid in Flemish band, like that of the Harvard gates, with limestone trim. The Colonial porch, the white door with its brass knocker and fanlight, along with the iron railing on the balcony above tipped with brass knobs, all add unusual features to the "street of clubs." Harvard Hall, heart of the club, formerly the dining room, now the lounge, has been pronounced the noblest and one of the most beautiful rooms in America...