Word: getting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...following officers were then elected: president, L. L. Falk 2L.; vice-president, G. S. Taylor '08; secretary and treasurer, G. Emerson '08; executive committee, the three officers, J. B. Davis 2L., and C. Apollonio '08. An attempt will be made to get Mr. Hughes to speak to the University on his proposed visit to Boston next Tuesday. After a heated discussion it was decided not to distribute campaign information about Mr. Hughes through the University before the caucus...
Undoubtedly the remedy for a state of affairs, whose existence to some extent we must admit, lies in a dignified appeal to the men whose presence here will give the undergraduate community a truly national scope. The more western men we get of the right stamp, the greater will become our prestige; not only among the graduates, but among the sub-freshmen, who will learn through their Harvard friends of the overwhelming advantages of the life at this University...
...being allowed to deteriorate, through failure to add the team photographs year by year. Captain Hurley's first team is the last of the football pictures, track is not up to date, and baseball is at least two years behind. Not many years hence it will be difficult to get these pictures, and we shall find, when it is too late, that the Trophy Room is permanently incomplete...
...list is published, it will be as a warning to the weak minded who may fall in future years, and not altogether a punishment to past offenders. There is no reason, therefore, why the doubtful names should not be withheld. A great effort was made last autumn to get conclusive evidence, and there is a considerable list of men concerning whose guilt there is not the slightest doubt. If these are not published, the time and labor spent in making up the list will have been worse than useless. If published, not only will a well-deserved punishment be inflicted...
...scene of the second act is laid in Paris. Mr. Grumble is busily engaged in the pursuit of an impecunious French nobleman, Count de Castleless, when Hathaway arrives. Disguising himself as the Count, Philip manages to get an interview with Marjorie. On the same day he receives a message that his uncle in England has died and left him his title and fortune, being without a direct heir...