Word: group
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Former football players who won their "H" are in sections 30 and 34. Varsity Club members are in sections 30 and 32 (single seats), 29 and 34. The class of '79 is in sections 29 and 35, concrete seats. The undergraduates applying for one seat, who constitute group 1A, of whom there are 400, are all in the concrete seats in section 32, the centre section. This is the cheering section. The graduates applying for one seat, who number 775, are placed 200 in section 32 and 575 in section 33. Professional school students and graduates of these schools asking...
...table published this morning gives some interesting figures upon the way in which the members of the class of 1914 have mapped out their plans of study for three years' work according to the new grouping requirements put in force last year. Concentration in the field of History, Government and Economics attracted 45 per cent, of the class, while 30 per cent, is specializing in Languages, Literature, Art and Music. While only two per cent of the class has elected to do major work in Philosophy and Mathematics, it is the group in which more than in any other...
...believed by Catholics to be neither impeccable as a man, nor necessarily and in all cases infallible as a priest in giving voice to his decisions. Nor is he in the habit of passing judgments on trivial matters or on trivial occasions. There were, not many years since, a group of ill-informed but docile persons who were interested in improving their knowledge concerning the Catholic faith. They wrote down questions upon slips of paper, and placed them in a box in a church, whence they were removed and answered at leisure by a priest. The collected questions and their...
...remedy reveals the fact that there are some who believe that Harvard may be greatly benefited by a modification of her system upon lines resembling in a certain degree the preceptorial system at Princeton. To those who are under any misapprehension that the College Office is inhabited by a group of unreasonable officers always opposed to the undergraduates' point of view, the article is especially recommended, for if anything is revealed it is that the Office aims to understand a problem as the student sees it and with him work for its solution...
Less than two pages suffice for "Fifty Years Out," the speech of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Oliver Wendell Holmes '61, addressed to the Alumni on Commencement Day. It is a superb and stately offering of the fruitions and anticipations of a famous group of Harvard graduates. Those of us who heard Justice Holmes can never forget this address: the rest should read...