Word: hume
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Donald H. Davidson '39, Staten Island, New York; Hume Dow '33, Staten Island, New York; Edward A. Drew '37, Flushing, New York; Richard B. Finn '39, Niagara Falls, New York; Chadbourne Gilpatrick '37, White Plains, New York; Frederick P. Glike '37, Meriden, Connecticut; Arnold Gottlieb '38, Brooklyn, New York; Stephen S. Gracewski '39, Thompsonville, Connecticut; Edgar L. Haff, Jr. '39, Fort Edward, New York; Warren C. Hall '38, Schenectady, New York; Harold Harris '39, New York City; Peter Hodson '39, New York City; Frederick P. Jenks '37, New York City...
...Journal, that Johnson himself had seen and approved it, was "gravely misleading." Although the high points of the previous Journal-the accounts of Johnson reproving Boswell for drunkenness, the celebrated orders to Mrs. MacLeod not to leave her family home, the great arguments on Ossian, on Burke, on Hume, Garrick, Goldsmith and Swift-remain the high points of the present edition, the new book is more intimate, less stilted, abounds in picturesque details of travelers' discomforts in the islands off Scotland in 1773. The Journal begins with its superb description of the Rambler...
...officers elected are: George R. Ellis 1G.B., president; Hume Dow '38, vice-president in charge of speakers; George L. Weissman '39, vice-president in charge of literature; Robert R. Ross '37, assistant speakers committee; Howard Houseman 3L., secretary; Robert H. Chase '38, treasurer; and Basil Pollit '40, Freshman representative...
With Robert Levi '38 presiding as temporary chairman, a temporary executive committee was formed. The members elected to it were Hume Dow '38, William T. Dean, Jr. '37, David E. Feller '38, Robert S. Levy '38, Basil Pollitt '40, Robert R. Ross '37, Boris Yuchu '38, and Margaret Harriss, Radcliffe...
Bolles opened by saying that western material was in no way--superior to what he had found in the east. The heaviest man on the Washington crew was 186 pounds, he said, and Don Hume, the stroke, weighed about 160. After seeing the gathering at the meeting he believed that the material at Harvard would certainly be satisfactory...