Word: reunioning
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Since his expanded Ph.D. thesis appeared in book form as "The Road to Reunion" and won him the 1938 Pulitzer Prize in history, Professor Buck has sat securely on the top of the American history heap. And although he does spend his summers on the Cape and has done the major part of his studying in Cambridge, he could never be called a New Englander. Born in Columbus, Ohio and attending Ohio State in his home town, Buck, after deciding not to be a biologist, has traveled periodically through the South and spent a year in Europe on a Sheldon...
Something about the presence of Harry Pulham in Harvard Square over the weekend raised in our mind the question of the Twenty-Fifth Reunion of the Class of '42. After worrying for a few hours about whether there would be any of the Class left in 1967 we settled down to the less morbid pursuit of guessing what Harvard will be like when that day comes around...
...people among the dumfounded public were ready to deny this obvious fact. But, knowing Mr. Lewis, they wanted to know a couple of facts about the accouplement before they started applause. For years the animosity of Mr. Lewis and Mr. Green was the chief stumbling block to a reunion of labor. According to one published plan, the new president of accoupled labor would be A.F. of L.'s Secretary-Treasurer George Meany; Mr. Green would be turned out to pasture on a $20,000-a-year pension; Machiavellian Mr. Lewis would get a vice-presidency; Mr. Murray, to whom...
Chosen at a meeting of the Association at the Harvard Club of Boston, Harte is a member of the class which is holding its 25th reunion in June. His duties as Chief Marshal will consist of directing the traditional procession of Alumni through the Yard on the afternoon of Commencement Day, and he will select the Aids and Marshals who will assist him with the day's alumni program...
Bowditch's first voyage took him to the French Isle of Bourbon (now Reunion) in the Indian Ocean. It was exotic after Salem, but not as exotic as Bowditch seemed to the French when he blushed at their conversations. "Il n'a pas encore perdu sa pucelage," a Frenchman explained to a French lady. "Quelle âge avez-vous, monsieur?" she asked Bowditch. "Twenty-three." The French lady threw up her hands: "C'est une chose absolument impossible de conserver la pucelage á cette...