Word: snow
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...University wrestling team will open its season today with a meet with Andover in the Hemenway Gymnasium at 4 o'clock. The bouts will be as follows: heavy weight class, Captain W. B. Snow '18 vs. Russell (A); 175-pound class, S. Burnham '19 vs. Russell (A); 158-pound class, O. R. Lindesmith '17 vs. Vines (A); 145-pound class, H. D. Killam '19 vs. Miller (A); 135-pound class, R. W. Killam '19 vs. Brown (A); 125-pound class, E. L. Davidson '17 vs. Smith (A); 115-pound class, M. J. Meyer '18 or H. L. Ettlinger...
...competition between the Law School Clubs, the Witanagemot Club of the Law School was given the credit of defeating the Lowell club for the Ames Prize, when the actual result was to the contrary. The Lowell club, whose argument was upheld by A. C. Reis 3L and C. E. Snow 3L, was awarded the decision by the judges of the competition. The case argued was "The Danbury Hatter's Case as affected by the Clayton Act," and the attorneys for the Witanagemot club were L. M. Reiser 3L and V. E. Wild...
...round of the third-year competition in Langdell Hall last evening. L. M. Reiser 3L and U. E. Wild 3L presented the argument for the winning club which was the defendant in the case argued, while the losing team was composed of A. C. Reis 3L and C. E. Snow 3L. The case presented was, "The Danbury Hatter's Case as affected by the Clayton Act." A large crowd was in attendance to hear the very able arguments offered by both sides...
...Whitney 1GB; "Westal Virgins," P. Camman '18; "Sunday's Pets," R. P. Hallowell '20; "Independents," H. L. M. Cole 1L. The latter team is composed of men who signed up unattached. It includes E. Tougas 2L, A. S. Anderson '17, L. B. Cooper 1L, P. Smart 3L, W. T. Snow '18, H. W. Gleason '17, A. W. McDonald '20, S. Pierce '19 and any others who report to Randolph 36 today...
...have a large athletic club here named Harvard. On days when it rains the students read books"; or the famous description of Artemus Ward that Harvard College was "pleasantly located in the bar-room of Parker's." Life in time may become as rigorous as it was when the snow filtered through the roof of Massachusetts Hall, ice was cracked for matutinal ablutions and beer and soggy biscuits were the breakfast food. The declining use of purchased literature perhaps means increasing dependence on the wonderful collection of books the University has made, and a general inclination to select the courses...