Word: springing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Another competition for memberships in the club will be conducted in the spring, according to W.N. Bump '28, president of the organization. Those who will be initiated next Monday are; W.C. Atwater '28, C.D. Breckinridge '31, T.W. Dunn '31, R.R. Forester '30, A.T. Hartwell '29, C.E. Henderson '28, Sargent Kennedy '28, D.M. Leith '29, M. McKay '31, J.I. Pool '28, I.T. Williams '31, and J.R. Wood...
President Hurie looked out his office window. Clarksville, he thought, a quiet town . . . trees, lawns, Missouri Pacific depot, county court house . . . not like New York, very poor, every body . . . last spring's rains and floods, top soil washed away, cotton crop a failure, last year's cotton sold for only a few cents a pound. No money in Clarksville. I have $3,000 in the bank . . . savings of 15 years teaching . . . 1912, graduated Union Theological Seminary, preached in some New York churches. Perhaps, can raise the $115,000 there...
Breaking a traditional policy which has limited Freshman debating contests to one triangular debate with Yale and Princeton in the spring, the Harvard Debating Council is responding to invitations from other colleges for Freshman debates, and will send Freshman teams onto the platform against Boston College, Temple, Tufts, William and Mary, Princeton, and Yale. Coincident with the extension of the Freshman schedule, a 1931 debating club will be formed to train Freshman for the league debates, and an organization meeting will be held in the Smith Halls Common Room Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock...
...debates will be undergraduates of the University. As was the case in the two preceding debates this year, a competition for chairman and secretary of the Debating Union is now under way, and these officers will be appointed before midyears. They will manage the bi-weekly debates of the spring term, obtaining speakers and fixing dates for the meetings...
...take their places on the uppermost rungs of the intellectual ladder giving 12 and 9 courses in Greek respectively. Indeed if this were true, that "even Williams," as the writer puts it, should have more courses in Greek than Harvard, then might the eager Cambridge drinker at the classic spring cry horror and alas, and leave for Williamstown--where he might also enjoy the better climate and the winter sports. But in rear lest such should actually be the case, the Vagabond did a bit of investigating here and there throughout the Yard, and discovered--with so much joy that...