Word: harper
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Finnish baths would not come to the University, so Jakko Mikkola, assistant coach of the track team, took his distance men to the baths. Last Saturday afternoon after their workout Willard Tibbetts, Leo Ryan, Charles Harper, Robert Parker, and Lee Coombs were taken from Soldiers Field to Quincy, where one of the few Finnish baths in America is located...
...Union announces the following list of ushers for the dance: A. A. Baruhart 1L, J. C. Bickford '27, P. W. Claflin '27, J. Y. Cole '25, W. P. Exton '26, P. S. Fanning 2L, C. A. Harper '26, M. P. Lichauco 2L, M. de I. Lippincott L. W. I. Nichols '26, D. R. Ovans '28, G. C. Richards '28, J. McC. Roots '28, F. C. Shaughnessy '28, F.. Swarts '26, J. T. Sykes '28, J. T. Wood '25, Andrews Wyman...
Professor C. R. Post '04 and Professor G. H. Chase '96 have united in writing a book called "A History of Sculpture", recently published by Harper and Brothers. This book traces the rise and fall of the art of sculpture from earliest times to the present day, and does for its field what the various "outline" histories have done in other branches of human activity...
...became a reporter in Columbus and a realist. His later reading and travels embraced Europe widely. He edited The Atlantic Monthly. He was an intimate of Longfellow, Whittier, Hawthorne, Emerson, Holmes. He became an editor of Harper's, an honorary Doctor of Literature four times over (including a degree from Oxford); he was finally called "dean of American letters." In 1920, full of years and honor, William Dean Howells died at his Manhattan home...
...grinding continued, bolstered by "human interest" features ranging in tenor from the earnest optimism of the American Magazine to the flatulent body-worship of the Macfadden publications, the emphasis was more than ever on fiction. Last year, Norman Hapgood, widely known through his associations with Collier's and Harper's, was put in charge as editor; but, in spite of this, the International has not had the steady growth of its pure-fiction relative, the Cosmopolitan, At the coming union, it appears as though ax-grinding would be bred out completely...