Word: mem
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Engineering 210 Pierce 202 Engineering 511 (Geol. 11) Rotch Bldg. Engineering 72 Pierce 304 TUESDAY, JANUARY 25 9.15 A. M. Engineering 330 Pierce 304 Engineering 450 Pierce 304 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26 Engineering 54 (E. S. 7c) Pierce 304 Engineering 59 Pierce 304 Engineering 223 (Ph. 4c) Mem. Hall Engineering 236 Pierce 202 Engineering 310 Pierce 213 Engineering Science 10 Engineering 601 Pierce 202 FRIDAY, JANUARY 28 9.15 A. M. Engineering 150 Pierce 304 Engineering 221 (Ph. 4a) Emerson J Engineering 400 Pierce 304 SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 9.15 A. M. Engineering 120 Pierce 304 Engineering 211 Pierce 202 MONDAY, JANUARY...
...rate, whatever may be the cause, the fact is that a chapel with make no appeal to the majority of students, nor in a few years will its function be even remembered, as the present-day attitude towards Mem Hall Shows. If our object is in reality to aid the cause of education against war, let us take practical steps to that end through a Professor's Chair, or international scholarships, or some such means, rather than by raising merely another monument to the hypocrisy and futility of the Human face. Chester T. Lane...
...Depew is distinguished. Lawyer, politician, public and post- prandial orator, he has seen many years full of service and honor. And the class of '89 is a distinguished class in its own right, patriarch or none. Of its 120 mem bers, there were at one-and-the sametime 17 occupying seats on benches of the judiciary. It has contributed 27 district attorneys and corporation counsels to our legal aristocracy. Lately it has styled itself "famous class"* without fear of contradiction...
...Calcutta. His scholastic attainments must have been very great, for subsequently his speeches showed him to be a man of refined culture and his poetry, mystical and beautiful, revealed the flower of his Oriental soul. It may be assumed that he was also conscious of the sahibs and mem-sahibs that stirred among the teeming millions of India, and he may have wondered vaguely why the great sahib in Government House kept such state. He prepared to enter the Indian Civil Service. All his life long he never forgot his debt to British culture...
England. This England, of which he had heard so much, was certainly a queer place. All the buildings were square and pointed and dirty. All the people were sahibs and mem-sahibs, but somehow quite different from those in far-off India. None of them wore those spotless white clothes which they wore in the land of Ind. More strange, many seemed very poor, and none of them seemed to have any servants following them. The men that he mixed with at the university and at the Inns of Court eyed him strangely. When he spoke to them, which...