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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Senior executive committee referred the matter to G. A. Percy '19, first marshal of his class. He said that the class of 1918 was to hold a dinner on Monday evening, June 16, and was also planning to hold some sort of a reunion on Class Day. He said further that he would prefer to have the 1918 men join in their own activities rather than those of the Seniors. Accordingly it was decided that men of the class of 1918 will not share in any of the Senior activities. However, they may procure Class Day tickets on the regular...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NOT TO SHARE SENIOR ACTIVITIES | 5/19/1919 | See Source »

...Class Day; second, that between 12 noon and 2 o'clock all materials must be carried in by attendants on foot; third, that between 2 and 11 o'clock, attendants will not be allowed to enter or leave the Yard with dishes, ice-cream cans, or anything of this sort. Spreads must provide their caterers and his attendants with Yard tickets. Any further information may be obtained at Dunster 54, from 1.30 to 2.30 o'clock daily except Saturday...

Author: By C. A. Clark jr. and Chairman CLASS Day committee., S | Title: CLASS DAY ANNOUNCEMENT | 5/17/1919 | See Source »

...right sort of personal interest on the part of the undergraduate is presupposed. Obviously, unless he chooses the course that will be of most benefit to him, the system will be a failure. There are some who are guided by other considerations, although few carry it to the extent of the student who had, "no course before ten, none after one, none on Mondays or Saturdays, and none above the ground floor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHOOSING FIELDS OF STUDY | 5/14/1919 | See Source »

...University, secured a "shell" of rather ponderous bulk and steered by the bow oar with the aid of a foot attachment. On the day of the regatta the Harvard oarsmen discovered that fourteen crews were entered in the race and after a consultation they decided that some sort of insignia must be worn for the purpose of distinguishing the Harvard boat from the thirteen others. The upshot was that President Eliot and a fellow oarsmen were dispatched post-haste to Boston to supply the deficiency. The idea of brightly colored handkerchiefs occurring to them, the two entered a dry goods...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOW CRIMSON BECAME THE COLLEGE COLOR. | 5/6/1919 | See Source »

...lessons we have learned through the war, one has been very deeply impressed on the world at large, and that is the necessity of giving young men, especially young men away from home, the opportunity of embodying home hospitality and of meeting the right sort of young women. We have been urged by the War Camp Community service to continue for the men out of service the hostess work done for them while in uniform, and have recently received a copy of a letter from Secretary of War Newton D. Baker, urging in the strongest terms that this work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 4/30/1919 | See Source »

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