Word: projected
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...been promised by private citizens as soon as the State gave $500,000. Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst is the principal donor to the fund. She offers to give money to obtain plans by international competition and to pay Professor B. R. Maybeck, who will explain the project to eastern and European architects. Mrs. Hearst, in her letter, said it was her desire to do something as a memorial to Senator Hearst's love for the State. It is understood that she will cause to be erected two buildings as a part of any plan accepted. One will be a direct...
...arrangements for the Intercollegiate Republican Parade are being perfected as rapidly as possible, and the success of the project seems assured. Delegations have been promised from the following colleges: Brown, Dartmouth, Amhest, Technology, Tufts, Boston University, Boston Dental School and Harvard. Blue books have been placed in prominent places, as before announced in the CRIMSON, to be signed by all Harvard men who wish to enter the parade, and they are urged to hand in their names as early as possible. The parade will take place on the night of Friday...
...Bryan and the principles of the Chicago platform, declare their willingness to aid by some individual activity. Such willingness, it is believed, can best be shown by sending into the doubtful states two Harvard speakers of training, both in debate and in campaign work. The expenses of such a project the Harvard Republican Club is unable to bear without assistance. A subscription must therefore be taken. We the undersigned, as a committee appointed to solicit subscriptions, respectfully request the same to be forwarded to A. H. Brewer, 20 Holyoke street...
...Bryan and the principles of the Chicago platform declare their willingness to aid by some individual activity. Such willingness, it is believed, can best be shown by sending into the doubtful states two Harvard speakers of training, both in debate and in campaign work. The expenses of such a project the Harvard Republican Club is unable to bear without assistance. A subscription must therefore be taken. We the undersigned, as a committee appointed to solicit subscriptions, respectfully request the same to be forwarded to A. H. Brewer, 20 IHolyoke street...
...spring from the proposed Union, and that a large proportion of the students now in Cambridge are ready to use such an institution. We have the approval of the Corporation, the Board of Overseers, and the Faculty. The Professional School students, for whom no social affiliations exist, welcome the project; the undergraduates, who feel the effects of isolation, on the one hand, and cliqueishness on the other, desire its fulfillment; the athletic men look to it as a means towards supplying the unity and a common meeting-place, now sadly lacking. The graduates, wherever heard from, have expressed the hope...