Word: nones
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Last, but not least, the Freshmen would not be ready for the leniency, and other general traits of the Houses. Most of them do not know how to study properly, none of them would have tutors...
...Harvard Freshman tennis team will meet a rather weak Andover aggregation on the Divinity Courts at 2.15 o'clock this afternoon. The 1932 players have won four and lost none, having to their credit victories over M. I. T. Milton, the University Seconds, and St. Mark's, while Andover defeated Tech, 6 to 3, and Tufts, 7 to 2, although losing to Yale, 9 to 0, and to the University Seconds, 7-2. HARVARD BROWN Singles Frame, No. 1 No. 1, Paine Woodbury, No. 2 No. 2, Evans Townsend, No. 3 No. 3, McWilliams Beyer, No. 4 No. 4, Smith...
...hardly likely that the Bruin aggregation, three of whom, including Captain Williams, are sophomores, and none of whom have had much intercollegiate experience should give Captain B. H. Whitbeck's men much opposition...
There have been many other bridges under which the waters east of Manhattan have flowed since that time, and tunnels, too, have been built both east and west. In 1896 the Williamsburg Bridge was begun; in 1901 the Queensboro and the Manhattan. But none of these bridges were over Builder Lindenthal's river, although, as city commissioner of bridges he redesigned the Williamsburg Bridge and aided in the construction of the others. Meanwhile Railroader Rea, having found bridging the Hudson an insoluble financial problem, turned his attention to tunnels, and for him Consulting Engineer Lindenthal worked on the building...
...Divisional and the Reading Period have slain. Some Seniors have survived the first, and have gone; some are suffering the second, and stay; in neither case are there classes to attend, and so, reasons the Senior, there is no need of wearing his regalia. Yet this custom is none of the puerile collegiate tricks to which Harvard long since turned thumbs down; it is a dignified and respected tradition, with a long tale of years behind it. The University, becoming even more amorphous, gives up for the present the claim that a class grows unified in its last year...