Word: road
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Baker '13; 36, J. J. Cabot '13; 41, G. E. Fahys, Jr., '13; 76, H. K. Bush '11; Russell--17, G. H. Roosevelt '13; Russell Annex--R. D. Seamans '13; Stoughton--1, A. McQuade '10; 24, W. R. Ohler '10; Sumner--25, D. L. Marks 3L.; Sumner road--5, A. P. Gradolph '13; Thayer -- 4, T. P. Cooper '11; 47, E. A. Bemis '11; Trinity--7, D. V. Baker 2M.; Wadsworth--7, T. P. Chandler 1G.B.; Walter Hastings--32, W. A. Cole 1L.; 38, H. I. Armstrong 1L.; 47, W. Sammons '12; Ware--14, P. J. White...
...program will be as follows: 1. Comic Opera Gems, Mandolin Club 2. Knocked 'em in the Old Kent Road, Glee Club 3. Onion Rag, Banjo Club 4. Ciribiribin, Mandolin Club 5. Little Cotton Dolly, Glee Club 6. Harvardiana, Banjo Club 7. Sword of Ferrara, Glee Club 8. Second Conneticut March, Mandolin Club 9. Fair Harvard, Glee Club
...statement printed this morning concerning the extreme unpleasantness of the dust near the Stadium is only too true. There can be no question about the discomfort and unhealthfulness of feeling one's way through the yellow clouds of powdered road-bed; and we wonder why, when it is a source of annoyance to so many, this unsanitary condition is allowed to continue...
...course the duty of the city of Boston to care for its crowds; and when the dust from a short stretch of road destroys the pleasure and threatens the health of so many, it is reasonable that the road should be either watered or oiled. Since, however, the city does not seem over zealous to take the initiative, and since the Athletic Association is in part responsible for the handling of the crowd, we would suggest that the association make some arrangement with the street department whereby the dust will be laid...
...more scholastic quality and a higher general average of literary quality; the work of more recent years is marked by a greater freedom from conventional modes, and so has a stronger flavor of conviction. The contrast between the two poems by Mr. Houghton which open the book and the "Road Song" of Langdon Warner, or Mr. Wheelock's "Sunday Evening on the Common" shows this most clearly. The tendency is a healthy one. It begets the hope that progress is toward the combining of individual and original emotion with the art of adequate expression...