Word: member
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...words of a member of the class of 1927, reprinted from the first report of the class, place heavy but correct fingers on a weak part of that miraculous machinery which makes a youth into a Sophomore. Honest and broad as are the efforts of University Hall to give Freshmen an complete survey of available fields of concentration, the result is spotty. Practise has proven that neither the most lively lecturer, nor the traditional head of a department, nor the actual head of a department is necessarily the most expert summarizer of the work to which his life is dedicated...
...Luttman '29, is another member of this year's University team who may enter the Melrose meet. Since all who placed in the Intercollegiates, however, are entitled to enter the final Olympic trials without running in any previous meets, the Crimson miler and Intercollegiate champion, may be on hand at the Stadium the first week in July even though he does not run this weekend...
...scholastic victory of the University has brought to the foreground at Yale the matter of more intensive requirements for concentration. The position of a member of the Yale team, reported yesterday, is very distinctly in favor of courses more difficult than those demanded at present of the honors man, who alone has the privilege of concentrating his work in a particular field. There is also implicated a request that every student should choose, as at Harvard, a field of concentration: this attitude, together with approving words for the tutorial system, is indication that Yale has been stirred to sincere self...
Professor Buchanan first went to Japan in 1914 to join the Economics staff of Keio University. He remained there 11 years, returning to the United States in 1925 to become a member of the faculty of Ohio State University. He became connected with the Harvard Bureau of International Research in 1926, spent the past year in India in Economic research with special emphasis on industrialization, and left to return to Japan last January...
...Cotton Jr. '29 was the first to score, driving the ball between the uprights early in the first period. J. H. Phipps of Yale, a member of the family which donated the playing field, was the outstanding Blue horseman. He shot the first Eli goal in the second chukker, while L. A. Shaw '30 tallied for the Crimson. Cotton crashed the Yale defense for his second score in the third, giving Harvard a 3 to 1 lead...