Word: johnson
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...George Foot Moore, D.D., L.L.D., acting curator of the Semitic Museum during the absence of the curator; Howard Levi Gray, Ph.D., instructor in History for the second half-year of 1908-09; Philip Haskell Sylvester, M.D., assistant in Pediatrics for the remainder of the current academic year; Raymond Berguer Johnson, A.B., assistant in English for the second half of the current academic year...
...Grumble, L. W. Hill '10 Maria Grumble, L. M. Potter '08 Mavjory Grumble, R. D. Murphy '08 Philip Hathaway, J. R. Benton '08 Billie Burt, P. P. Marion '08 Bertie Bill, H. G. Tomlin '09 Herr Weider, W. K. Bradbury '10 Heinrich Weider, H. L. Murphy '08 Arethusa Johnson, H. H. Hemingway...
...Hughes, on the assumption that, if there had been only those two candidates, the voters who preferred Bryan would have voted for him and those who preferred Hughes would have voted for him. Similarly for the four other possible combinations of nominees. The results showed that more men preferred Johnson to one or the other of the Republicans, than they did Bryan, and that more Republicans would leave their party if Johnson was nominated than if Bryan was. R. S. HOAE...
...notice in Saturday morning's CRIMSON, that a victory is ascribed to Johnson over Bryan in Friday's straw ballot. I wish to take issue with this misleading statement. As a matter of fact, Bryan received a big majority over Johnson from the Democratic voters. It is ludicrous, to say the least, to count Republican votes for Democratic nominees, unless a Democrat is given first or second place. To force a Republican to vote for two Democrats is something quite apart from actual politics; nor are Democrats supposed to vote for Republicans in an actual election. The mere fact that...
...their games were J. Wolff, of Columbia, and C. Williams, of Pennsylvania, K. S. Johnson, of Harvard, tied his game with B. H. R. Stower, of Cambridge...