Word: steele
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...present condition of certain important industries. Sugar is the first of these considered. The treatment starts with a discussion of sugar production, and of the domestic cane and beet resources. The sugar refining industry is next taken up, and finally is considered the Sugar Trust. Iron and steel come next, and successive chapters on this industry deal with the general progress of the industries, with the steel rail situation, tin plate, imports and exports in general, and with the influence of the United States Steel Corporation. The concluding chapters of the volume take up the textile industries, silks, cottons...
...latest ideas in current construction. The floors, roof and stairways are built of reinforced concrete, while the outer walls are of brick and the inner walls of hollow tile blocks. The roof is slated, and has, on the top, a flat runway, on each end of which a steel lattice-work tower for supporting wireless antenna is to be erected. These have not yet been erected, but will be in place in a few weeks. The building contains 25 rooms, for research and instruction work. Five of these rooms are under ground, and will be used as constant temperature rooms...
...would remind you that the sons of Yale are always first class fighting men. I earnestly beg, therefore, that no spirit of overconfidence be allowed to germinate at Cambridge, but rather that our team go down to New Haven with the expectation of meeting a foe worthy of their steel." HENRY E. BRENNICK...
...construction of the addition to the club house of the Harvard Club of New York City is already well advanced and is proceeding toward completion rapidly, the steel work being practically finished. This addition covers a space of 25 feet on 44th street, giving a total frontage on that street at 75 feet and of 60 feet on 45th street, making a total or 160 feet on the latter. It is expected that the new building will be ready for occupancy by June 1, 1915, and possibly somewhat sooner...
...March, "Soldier's Field" R. K. Fletcher '07 2. Rhapsody, "Espana", Chabrier 3. Selection, "The Legend of Lora-via," Hasty Pudding Play, V. Freedley '14 4. Selection, "A Bug in a Rug" 1914 Pi Eta Play, W. Faulkner '14. L. G. del Castillo '14 5. March, "Harvardianna," S. B. Steel '14 6. Waltz, "The Beautiful Blue Danube," Strauss 7. a) Faun Dance from the panto-mine, "Pan and the Star," E. B. Hill '94 b) At Sea, Buck Harvard Glee Club, H. W. Frost '14, Accompanist 8. American Fantasy, Herbert Organ, Mr. Marshall. 9. Organ Solo, Toccata, (Suite Go-thique...