Word: herald
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With twelve letter men back, Brown should have a strong team next fall. The "Brown Daily Herald" has outlined the prospects as follows: "Twelve 'B' men will return next fall. These include Captain Andrews, halfback; Gordon, halfback; Fraser, fullback; Murphy, quarterback; Ward, Farnum, Huggening, and Bailey, tackles; McBee and Ormsby, ends; Maxwell, guard; and Staff, centre. The team has done a little spring training and will probably return a week early in the fall." The University-Brown game next fall comes on November 13, one week before the Yale game...
...speakers will be as follows: Richard Washburn Child '03, well-known author and lawyer; Colonel William Cary Sanger '74, former assistant-secretary of war; George Wigglesworth '74, lawyer and Overseer of the University; Thomas Tileston Baldwin '86, lawyer of Boston; and John Albert Macy '99, of the Boston Herald. The five newly elected undergraduate members of the Advocate will be taken on the board at this time...
...production are being pushed forward rapidly. The final arrangements have been completed for serving supper on the field at 5 o'clock, in order to accommodate out-of-town guests. The intermissions after the first and second acts will be half an hour each in length, and trumpeters will herald the rising of each curtain by playing representative motives from the opera, after the custom at Beyreuth...
...followed by a tour of inspection through the Columbia School of Journalism. After the election of officers and the transaction of other business the delegates will visit some of the big newspaper offices of New York. Besides the CRIMSON the following papers will be represented: Amherst "Student," Brown "Herald," Colgate "Madisonensis," Columbia "Spectator," Cornell "Sun," "The Dartmouth," Hamilton "Life," "The Haverford," Hobart "Herald," "The Lefayette," Michigan "Daily," "The Pennsylvanian," "Daily Princetonian," Rhode Island State College "Beacon," Syracuse "Daily Orange," Union "Concordiensis," Vermont "Cynic," Wesleyan "Argus," Williams "Record," Yale "News...
...club members stage, manage and act the plays without compensation. As examples of the modern drama, written and produced by students of it, they are much better dramatic investments than the conventional two-dollar play, of the modern box-office school. If they had lurid play bills to herald their coming; and a record of 300 nights on Broadway behind them, the theatre sheep would flock to see them and pronounce them capital...