Search Details

Word: kinds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Leavitt & Peirce's, the Co-operative, the Harvard Alumni Association at 50 State street, Boston, and at the New York Harvard Club. Applications will be received up to 6 o'clock, June 8. The number of tickets to be sold to graduates will be limited to five of each kind. Graduates will receive one free Yard and one free Stadium ticket when their regular application is filled. These Stadium tickets are not good unless the holder marches with his class. The price of tickets for graduates and undergraduates is as follows: Yard tickets, 35 cents each; Memorial tickets, $1 each...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLASS DAY APPLICATIONS | 5/9/1912 | See Source »

...Phillips Brooks House has had more than the usual number of requests for suits of clothes this spring, it is hoped that a large number will be brought in by this collection. All kinds of old clothes, no matter how old, and any kind of reading matter, except newspapers, are wanted. The text-book loan library in the Brooks House is supplied with books received in this collection and needs text-books used in the large courses most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROOKS HOUSE COLLECTION | 5/4/1912 | See Source »

...recent issue of the Alumni Bulletin there appears a communication that describes the workings of the Yale Alumni Fund and suggests that it offers a good model for crystallizing the interest of Harvard men for the building of a new library. As matters now stand, a student doing any kind of advanced work will find some of his material in Gore Hall, a little more in the basement of Appleton Chapel, and before completing his work, he has generally had occasion to resort to the basement of Perkins Hall or some other cellar that certainly offers no adequate facilities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OUR MOST PRESSING NEED. | 4/25/1912 | See Source »

...members conclusively proved. In November, followed an address by Booker T. Washington, and in December Dr. Grenfell's lecture on "Labrador". Later in the month, Mr. Underwood's illustrated talk, "Hunting with Canoo and Camera in New Brunswick" proved to be an example of the very best of its kind. Mr. William J. Burns need scarcely be mentioned to call to mind the enthusiastic crowd which greeted this presence in the Living Room. Nor should we fail to notice that three of the departments in which Harvard ranks high--medicine, the law, and engineering--have within a very few weeks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHAT THE 1912 UNION MANAGEMENT HAS DONE. | 4/13/1912 | See Source »

...following statistics prepared by Parke H. Davis, Princeton's member of the football rules committee, for the Princeton Alumni Weekly, showing the pursuits followed by the football players who have been graduated from Harvard. Yale and Princeton, are among the most interesting and important facts of their kind that have ever been compiled. They prove that famous college athletes after graduation are important factors in the business and professional world, a fact entirely contrary to the popular notion that brilliant athletes are, as a rule, nothing more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACT AND COMMENT | 3/23/1912 | See Source »

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