Word: greene
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Board of Managers, Edward Wetmore, Charles C. Beaman, Nathaniel T. Smith, Charles H. Russell, Jr., Samuel L. Ordway, T. Frank Brownell, Edward L. Parvis, Louis C. Clark, Amos K. Fiske, Henry H. Crocker, Jr., Eugene D. Hawkins, Franklin Bartlett, J. Hampden Robb, George Blagden; Committee on Admissions, George Walton Green, George H. Sargeant, G. Willett Van Nest, Louis L. Delafield, William K. Draper, Alfred W. Hoyt, D. Crawford Clark. The election will take place at the annual meeting of the Club...
...petty, illogical and totally inconsistent custom, undergraduates are practically compelled to wear blazers striped with their class colors. In the country during the summer months a man who wears his class color of yellow and black is invariably taken for a Princeton man, and quite naturally too; while donning green and white is supposed to prove conclusively that one hails from Dartmouth. As a result, the true Harvard colors are seldom seen, while those of Yale, Princeton and Columbia are everywhere flaunted before one's eyes. As one who has been here three years, I feel that the custom which...
...today. There are some good men in the boat, and the crew is without doubt big and strong enough, despite the reports to the contrary. Just now their oars are in the air all the time except during a very vigorous catch, but this is always noticeable in a green crew...
...circular was favorably received by the majority of members, and Messrs. G. W. Green, J. B. Ames, and A. H. Latham were chosen to present the request to the faculty. Meanwhile, a similar movement had been started in Boston, with the result that some two hundred additional names were collected in favor of the request. On Tuesday last, at an informal meeting, Mr. Green presented the request to the faculty and made an able speech in its favor. The matter was discussed in all its aspects, the faculty evincing a desire to weigh the merits of the question thoroughly before...
...qualify themselves to be superintendents of farms, country seats or public institutions. The property consists of 640 acres of excellent arable land in Jamaica Plain. Since the bequest of Mr. Benjamin Bussey was made, a commodious building, of considerable architectural merit, has been erected, in addition to barns and green houses. In 1872, the revenues of the institution were largely augmented by the gift of $100,000 by Mr. James Arnold. This gentleman stipulated that a professorship of tree culture should be established; and since then 137 acres of the Bussey property has been devoted to the culture of trees...