Word: though
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...banks were organized. The state institutions were at first somewhat reticent about changing their charters, fearing inconsistency on the part of the federal government, or hostile legislation by Congress, but their hesitation was soon overcome. Since that time the number of national banks has multiplied rapidly, but the circulation, though limited only by their capital, has increased very slowly in proportion...
...football team, he was a member of the track squad. As a Junior he played tackle on the football team and took part in track work. In 1908 he was captain of the football team which defeated Yale at New Haven, by the score of 4 to 0, though on account of an injured shoulder he was unable to play in the game. He was one of Walter Camp's selections for the All-America football team in 1905 and 1906. Moreover he had the distinction of being the last man to play for four years on the University football...
...gymnastic team will begin regular work in the Hemenway Gymnasium this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock, and hereafter practice will be held at this time on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Though a number of men were lost by graduation, the prospects for the team are very encouraging. The work will be under the supervision of coaches G. F. Evans '05 and C. L. Schrader, Inst. The annual novice meet, which is open to all undergraduates who have never won a place in a University meet, will be held shortly before the Christmas recess. Dr. Sargent has offered...
...nothing of note had been accomplished on Soldiers Field this fall, Captain Withington's team would, nevertheless, be considered as having made Harvard athletic history. Every loyal graduate and undergraduate cannot help rejoicing, though not without misgiving, in the hope that from now on it shall be an established fact that no member of a University team is in difficulty with the College Office...
...Union, few know to whom they are indebted for the large number of journals always at hand. With the exception of the Boston papers, all the dailies regularly found in the Living Room are presented by local Harvard clubs or their officers throughout the country. It is though gifts such as these that graduate organizations can make their existence felt by the student body in Cambridge, and that the undergraduate can be shown the ways in which he can do his small part after rejoining the ranks of the alumni. It is only just to the donors of these most...