Word: grouped
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Valuable autographs from the Amy Lowell collection make up the greater part of the display now being exhibited in the Treasure Room of Widener Library. One of the most prized specimens included in this group is the original copy of an unpublished epitaph by Ben Jonson...
...Harvard over; the CRIMSON does not believe that its proponents think that it can, or consider it desirable. The true university spirit of communism for the individual rather than for a series of cohesive entities is an obstacle to the success of any effort to organize Harvard College along group lines, however tenuous...
...Fine Arts 2c Fogg Small Lect.-rm. Fine Arts 2d Fogg Small Lect.-rm. French 21 Sever 23 Geology 7 Sever 17 German 1a, I, II Harvard 3 German 2, I Sever 5 Government 7b Sever 5, 6 Government 19 Sever 11 History 1 Mr. Cram, 1, 12, Conf. group I New Lect. Hall Mr. Dow, A, B New Lect. Hall Mr. Durand, Conf. group II Memorial Hall Mr. Evans, 4, 14, Conf. group III Harvard 5 Mr. Gideonse, 5, 13, Conf. group IV Harvard 6 Mr. Gratwick, 6, 15, Conf. group V Memorial Hall Mr. Jordan, 7, 18, Conf...
...Henry M. Flagler, founder of Florida's perpetual youth, was not the first modern tycoon to visit the Southeast and his railroad and hotels meant more to the commonalty than to Mr. Flagler's fellow rich men. The real pioneers of Tycoon's Coast were the group that formed the Jekyl Island Club in 1886, some 200 families, including Morgans, Goulds, Rockefellers, Drexels. Carnegies. John D. Rockefeller's life-perpetuating estate and private golf course at Ormond came later...
...week. There he completed a dicker terminating negotiations which have dragged on two years and more, realizing an ambition of many years. He took control of the distinguished old Daily Eagle, which during all the 87 years of its existence had been under the continuous ownership of a family group. _ Two upstate publishers thus became rivals in the huge, various New York City newspaper field. For only last August, another chain-paper man, Paul Block, bought the Brooklyn Standard-Union. Block began his newspaper career in Elmira, N. Y., and was publishing papers in Newark, Toledo, Duluth and Pittsburgh...