Word: lasting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Freshmen at Soldiers Field at 4 o'clock, in their fifth game of the season. J. R. Meehan will be in the box for the yearling nine. He is one of the most promising of the Freshman pitchers, and held the University to five hits in last Tuesday's game...
...general outline of the plan for military instruction at Harvard seems excellent," said General John Henry Sherburne '99 when interviewed for the CRIMSON recently. "One of the most serious troubles in the last war was to obtain trained and experienced officers. It is very fitting that Harvard should establish a school to remedy this great deficiency...
Harvard's last war-time duty has been completed with the overwhelming over-subscription of the College Victory Loan quota, and students may now face the future, without the presence of any very immediate national obligation to trouble their peace of mind. The war is won, the peace is paid for, and at first sight it would appear that college men are free to follow their own interests without let or hinderance...
...special conference on "The Relation of the College to the Student" will open at 2 o'clock, and the various representatives of the College and the undergraduates will be called in, the Student Council coming last. At 5 o'clock, the University Choir will sing several selections in Appleton Chapel for the Board. The members of the Corporation and the Board of Overseers will dine with President Lowell at his residence, 17 Quincy street, at 7.30 o'clock...
...annual trials for the Boylston Prizes for Elocution held last week, A. A. Rouner '20, and F. C. Packard '20, were awarded the two first prizes of $30 each. Their addresses dealt respectively with the "American Standard," taken from a speech of Booker T. Washington '96, and a poem by Alfred Noyes, "The Highwayman." Three second prizes of $20 each were also awarded as follows: R. E. Eckstein '20, "Joan of Arc," by Quincy; V. A. Kramer '18 ocC., extracts from a speech of President Wilson on the League of Nations; E. B. Schwults '19, "The Monroe Doctrine." The judges...