Word: samuels
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Oxford University makes a good beginning with its new professorship, that of American history, by appointing Samuel Eliot Morison, Ph.D., to fill the chair. As lecturer in history in Harvard University, Dr. Morison has proved himself well equipped for the work which lies before him in England. He will find that much of what he has to teach is news to English students, and that many of their ideas regarding the birth and growth of the United States need correction through a knowledge of history. As regards the early days of our country, and especially the wars of the founders...
Name Class.Abbott, L. J., 1924Abciovitz, Maxwell, 1923Abrams, Samuel, 1923Albert, C. F., 1923Allen, William, 1922Anson, M. L., 1922Apsey, L. S. 1924Armstrong, T. E., 1924Baisley, C. R., 1922Baker, Myles P., 1922Begg, J. M., 1924Berlin, Arthur, 1923Best, M. A., 1923Bickford, G. P. Jr., 1922Billings, M. P., 1923Blair--Smith, T. D., 1924Blatt, A. H., 1923Blumberg, Henry, 1923Boksenbaum, S. I., 1923Bolfton, Geoffrey, 1923Bostwick, R. C., 1923Bowman, F. E., 1924Bridge, John, 1922Brocker, W. G., ocCBrown, J. N., 1922Brown, Samuel, 1924Cairns, T. D., 1923Calvert, W. J. Jr., 1922Carpenter, E. F., 1922Carpenter, F. I. Jr., 1924Casey, W. J., 1924Chase, E. R., 1923Clapp, E. M., 1924Clark, H. W., 1923Cohan...
Practice for the wrestling team will begin as soon as a new coach can be secured to take the place of Mr. Samuel Anderson whose contract has expired...
George Miller Appleton of Buffalo, N. Y.; Samuel Augustus Duncan of Englewood, N. J.; Edward Francis Goode of Brookline; Benoni Lockwood Jr. of New York, N. Y.; Charles Clark Macomber of Newtonville; John Morrison Martin of Cambridge. At the CRIMSON Building polls will be open from 8 o'clock in the morning to 6 o'clock in the evening. At Sever Hall polls will be open immediately before and after classes from 8 o'clock until 1 o'clock...
...great man," said the Reverend Samuel McChord Crothers, D.D., L.D.D., last night in a talk to Freshmen on "The Value of Discrimination," "knows his own good points and develops them, knows the things which are worth while and sticks to them, knows the things which are valueless and avoids them. To most people life presents an endless succession of equally important duties that must be performed. The truly great man has the ability to discriminate between these many tasks, always to chose the really great and important one and to subordinate the others so that he goes through life with...