Word: seale
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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tions, and for the beauty and fullness of their printing and binding. Each volume has the Harvard seal imprinted on the front cover, and on the back cover, the Hopkins coat-of-arms. Of unusual interest in the present list are several volumes by President-emeritus Lowell, an of which have been autographed by the author...
...omitted)(ooo omitted) Allegheny Steel ....$303 $8260 Crown Cork & Seal. 971 247 General Foods 9,578 10,339 American Rolling Mill 312D 1,821D Remington Rand ... null 1,301D Bendix Aviation .... 1,096 367D U. S. Steel 28,0740 54,542D General Outdoor Advertising QiQD 1,6970 National Steel 2,569 1,308 Coca-Cola 8,342 8,802 The Bureau of Railway Economics reported the net operating revenue of 149 Class 1 railroads for the first nine months up to $340,000,000 from $197,000,000 a year ago. Whereas most oil companies did not show nine-month...
...first important display of the year, Widener Library has on view this week many items of historical interest. There are the ceremonial silver keys, the gift of William G. Stearns, 1825, with which President Conant was inducted into office Monday, the seal of 1850, the great seal of 1885, and the original charter of 1650 with Governor Dudley's signature. There are also miscellaneous lawbooks with entries of the overseers from...
...actual results of Professor Morison's researches on the College Seals have been published in an article for the September Graduates Magazine which will go on sale either today or tomorrow. He has established, for the first time, the approximate dates at which seals of various designs were officially used. The motto, "Veritas," he discovered, was not actually used until 1885 except for a brief period under Josiah Quincy although it was officially recommended at an overseers' meeting in 1643. At a meeting of the Harvard Club in New York in 1878 Oliver Wendell Holmes 1816, presented a sonnet ridiculing...
...first Seal in the long series of those which have been recorded, was made seven years before the College was chartered, somewhere in the Colonies, but was little if ever used. In 1650 the "In Christi Gloriam" seal, which will be presented to President Conant in the Inauguration ceremony along with the present official one, was probably made in London. In 1693 John Coney, the famous Colonial silversmith, made another, remarkable for its simplicity and dignity, which was used until 1812. At this time a simple reproduction was made. Josiah Quincy, President of the College from...