Word: press
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Harvard Celebrities," which has just been issued from the University Press, is a collection of fourteen exceedingly clever caricatures of men connected with Harvard or Harvard undergraduate life. The drawings, by E. R. Little '04, and the marginal designs, by F. G. Hall '03, are excellent; the accompanying verses, by H. M. Eliot, Jr., '02, are bright and pointed. The caricatures in the book are of Dean Shaler, "Herbie," Professors Wendell, Moore and Norton, Dean Briggs, Mr. Copeland, Mr. LaRose, McMaster, "The Mucker," Mr. Cram, Sanborn, "The Poco," Mr. Nolan. The price...
...coaches' applications, 1565 Cheering section applications, 622 H. A. A. applications, 3104 Undergraduate season ticket holders' applications, 194 Undergraduate applications, 4029 Graduate season ticket holders' applications, 469 Graduates' Athletic Association applications, 1362 Graduates' applications, 9892 Season ticket holders' applications, 2554 Benefactors, 135 State and city officials, 95 Schools, 162 Press and special, 322 New York Harvard Club, 884 -- Total...
...managers for the French play this year are as follows: Manager, A. C. White '02; assistant manager, J. A. O'Reilly '02; business manager, R. M. Acosta '04; press manager, J. R. Fowler '04; stage manager, S. C. Smith...
...club has decided this year to enter a league composed of the following chess clubs: Boston Press, Young Men's Union, Dorchester, and Boston Athletic Association. Beginning early in November this league will hold fortnightly matches, at which the various clubs will each enter teams of ten men arrranged in order of strength. At every match these teams will be paired off against each other and the team scoring the greates number of victories during the winter will win the championship...
...aggressive rivalry. . . . Oxford, Cambridge -- there is an immediate suggestion of fifteenth century architecture, overgrown with ivy." In a word, English athletics have none of that bitterness too often seen here when some disputed point of small importance is held up to public view for weeks by the daily press. Such publicity, according to English ideas, smacks too strongly of professionalism, or at least lays undue emphasis on something that should be merely the recreation of gentlemen, not the object in life for the time being of all interested...