Word: making
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...meet is successful this year it is planned to make the event an annual affair. It will be the only athletic contest of any kind in which Boston fans can see their favorites in action all at the same time, and should prove a great drawing card for Boston's sporting population...
...remaining members of the squad include men who failed to make their letter last year and some last year's second team men. This number is, made up of Harwood Ellis '31, star goalie of the 1931 sextet, M. H. Hale, Jr. '32, Sumner Putnam '31, H. D. Everett '31, T. W. Hallowell '31, F. A. Harding '31, F. A. Martin '32, C. E. McGregor, Jr. '32, R. S. Ogden '31 and F. M. Pruyn...
...Kreutzberg is the better technician--there were few who denied that. His gestures have a definiteness, a clarity, that Miss Georgi's lacked. But inspired as they are in much the same way by the same sort of thing, they make an ideal pair, and Miss Georgi makes up in a fiery temperament what she lacks in technique...
...again opens the season with a race against the Crimson crews on April 26. Harvard, Navy, Pennsylvania, and M. I. T. all compete in a quadrangular regatta on the Charles river on May 17. The following Saturday the crew will make a trip to Ithaca where a race will be held with Cornell and Syracuse. The Yale regatta will complete the season on June 20 at New London. In addition, the third University crew will compete in the American Rowing Association Regatta at Philadelphia on May 31, while a crew composed of University and Freshman substitutes will meet the Yale...
Just as Harvard graduates were fore-most among those who from the earliest years of the Bay Colony helped materially to build up Massachusetts and the Nation, so today Harvard graduates form the majority of the committee which is working to make the observance of the founding of the colony an event of national and international significance. The celebration which they plan will only serve to bring into sharper relief the great part that Harvard has played in history...