Word: lima
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Dean Hamilton, of Milton; Charles Frederick Havemeyer, of New York, N. Y.; Jabish Holmes, Jr., of New York, N. Y.; Richard Sears Humphrey, of Milton; Reginald Jenney, of Brookline; Henry Parsons King, of Boston; George Cabot Lee, Jr., of Westwood; Francis Bacon Lothrop, of Boston; James Alfred MacDonell, of Lima, O.; Martin Edgar Olmsted, of Harrisburg, Pa.; Robert Minturn Sedgwick, of New York, N. Y.; Carl Senff Stillman, Jr., of Wellesley; Elijah Hubbard Stillman, of Wellesley; Thomas Crane Wales, of Chestnut Hill; manager, John Archibald Sessions, of Northampton...
...annual convention of Harvard Clubs whereby it will meet in Washington must be regarded as a change that is altogether excellent. Washington is a city that is rather over-conventioned, with everything from the association of amalgamated master plumbers to the delegation of lady school teachers from Lima, Ohio, meeting there. But Washington has always room for notable men; it could not be honored by the presence of any representative group more than it could by the presence of the Associated Clubs...
...Chicago, Ill.; Robert Edward Jackson '19, of Wakefield; Baroll McNear '19, of San Francisco, Cal.; Sydney James Rogers '17, of Cambridge; Charles Upton Shreve, 3d, '19, of Detroit, Mich.; Hunt Wentworth '17, of Chicago, Ill.; Sidney Hedges Wirt '19, of Brookline; and John Franklin Cover '18, of Lima, Ohio, manager...
...construction of the new swimming pool in the Union was started last night with the appointment of the following committee to take charge of the financial problem: Wallace Fleming '17, of New York, N. Y. (chairman); David Mason Little, Jr., '18, of Salem; John Franklin Cover, Jr., '17, of Lima, O.; and Hunt Wentworth '17, of Chicago...
Following on Professor Lima's opinion in the CRIMSON a week ago that exchange professorships with South America are feasible, Dr. Klein adds more definitely that Harvard may well act first in this project. That Harvard is little known in South America is hardly surprising. For, conversely, few Americans have heard that Argentina has a university established twenty-three years before Harvard was in existence. Still, when our entire nation's acquaintance with Spanish America is slight, and when the University possibly ranks no better than fourth among American institutions in its southern influence, our broad considerations are backed...