Word: laycock
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Deans and professors representing the colleges and universities are: J. P. Adams, Brown; G. P. Bacon, Tufts; F. W. Brown, Bowdoin; H. M. Dadourian, Trinity; A. C. Hanford, Harvard; B. A. Hazeltine, Middlebury; L. A. Howland, Wesleyan; Craven Laycock, Dartmouth; H. P. Little, Clark; T. R. Mather, Boston University; K. B. Murdock, Harvard; C. S. Potter, Amherst; T. C. Smith, Williams; Elijah Swift, Frederick Tupper, Vermont; C. H. Warren, Yale; W. M. Warren, Boston University; F. G. Wren, Tufts...
...delegates which have been invited to spend the two days at the University itself are, Professors Brown and Smith, Dean Little, guests of Adams House; Professor Dadourian, Dean Laycock, guests of Leverett House; Acting Dean Scott, Acting President Mead, guests of Kirkland House; President Moody, Dean C. H. Warren, guests of Leverett House; Dean Hazeltine, Professor Tupper, guests of Winthrop House; and President Hopkins, President Sills, guests of President Lowell...
...great was its encouragement when the returns from a by-election for the Buckrose division of Yorkshire, showed that Major A. N. Brathwaite (Conservative) had won, receiving 12,089 votes, as opposed to 10,537 cast for Sir Harry Verney (Liberal) and only 2,191 for H. C. Laycock (Laborite...
Captain Ashenbach, Coach Hawley, Dean Laycock and Clark Tobin '09, a member of the Green advisory staff and himself a former football star addressed the two thousand undergraduates who filled the gymnasium last night. All the speakers emphasized the fact that although the game Saturday is not the Green's only objective this year, the Dartmouth eleven would enter the Stadium, to win or lose, an inspired group...
Such is Dean Laycock's proposition; but what does it really amount to? It does not apply to college rooms, to regulations regarding college studies, and only partially to cuts. One is tempted to wonder, too, if a student can obtain all the desires of his heart merely by insisting that they are reasonable. At any rate, it seems that "abolutely free men" is a little too broad a phrase...