Word: print
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Crimson has been requested by the College office to print the following...
...print this morning a communication from the President of the Harvard Memorial Society which deserves the attention of undergraduates. Although most of us are more or less familiar with the good work which the Society has done to preserve the records and traditions of the College, we have few occasions when we can show our appreciation and interest in tangible form. The idea of celebrating the three hundredth anniversary of the birth of John Harvard is a novel one and one which furnishes many possibilities for unique and effective ceremonies. We know that undergraduates will join heartily in any celebration...
...communication suggesting the inappropriateness for most occasions of the opening lines of "Fair Harvard," which we print in another column this morning, deserves more attention than we are apt to realize at the first glance. Certainly when we stop to consider the meaning of these lines, so familiar to every Harvard man, we must admit their inappropriateness in nine cases out of ten. But it is one thing to criticise and another to construct. If new words were to be written, as the writer of the communication suggests, we feel that they should only be officially adopted after the most...
...exhibition between the camera clubs of Harvard, Pennsylvania and Michigan. Each club entered fifty pictures, and of the three prizes and seven honorable mentions, which were awarded, Harvard received a first prize and four honorable mentions. W. Ordway '10 won the prize for the best individual photograph with his print called "Evening on the Charles." M. T. Fleisher and G. Kemmerer, both of the University of Pennsylvania, won second and third prizes respectively. F. T. Marshall '07, E. H. Riedel 1G., M. N. McN. Watts '09 and C. B. Roepper '10 received honorable mention. The University of Pennsylvania was awarded...
...that some students may be able either to send him copies of such ballads or songs, which they may chance to know, or to call his attention to people in various parts of the country, who could help him discover such material. We therefore request you to print this suggestion that any member of the University who can assist Mr. Lomax in his researches, in giving him any information concerning the popular poetry of the South or the West, will have the kindness to address him on the subject at 67 Oxford street, Cambridge. We may add that the materials...