Word: sawing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...days ago I saw in the paper a letter from a graduate suggesting a bronze tablet in Soldiers Field in memory of Norman Prince '08. It occurred to me that the fact might not be generally known that the oak panels in the wainscoating of the Hall of the Union were intended for just such a purpose. I happened to be present when the architect, Mr. C. F. McKim, was discussing his plans for the Union with Mr. Higginson and others, and he said then that he hoped that the plain panels would genually be replaced by carved once inscribed...
That the Tufts football team out-played the University team in every department of the game is the opinion of C. E. Brickley '15, captain of the 1914 eleven. "It was the first time I ever saw a Harvard team forced to forward passing in its own territory in desperate attempts to advance the ball. In my opinion there was too much hesitation in running plays and too much crudeness in handling the ball...
...General Court which "dreaded to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches when our present ministers shall lie in the dust." But the school was only gradually differentiated from the College, and not until 1816 was the distinction between them definitely and formally made. The same year saw the foundation of a "Society for the Promotion of Theological Education in Harvard University," the first class graduated from the school in December, 1817; nine years later the money had been secured for the building of Divinity Hall. For a full century the school has maintained its high ideals of scholarship...
...more intensely interesting region than Picardy for the three months before the present offensive could scarcely be found. For that entire period we saw day by day, step by step, the preparations made on a greater scale than ever before. Our headquarters were some 20 miles from Amiens, on the national highway leading to Peronne, directly behind the sector of lines where the French troops have brought the heaviest pressure to bear...
...Verdun itself is absolutely deserted save for a few important looking gendarmes. Some streets and sections are completely laid waste, others alongside are untouched. As for German prisoners I saw about 50 or 75 in all. It was great sport to see the French soldiers surrounding a German prisoner or two, drawing their knives and slashing off buttons, shoulder straps, insignia--anything for a souvenir. We could look in vain for a hungry or weak looking German to best out stories of hardships. But they looked healthy, and, above all, greatly pleased that they were headed away from the lines...