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Word: waylande (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Brown University. Illuminations were a specialty among the Brown students; they loved to burn candles, especially at Commencement when as many as eight candles would glimmer in each of old University Hall's 178 windows. But candle-burning seemed dangerous and in 1827 Brown's President Francis Wayland put a ban upon it. No use for students and alumni to protest by burning a tar barrel on the campus; their president rushed out from his house and angrily drove them away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Most Splendid Appearance | 10/24/1932 | See Source »

Malcolm Bancroft '33, of Cambridge, was elected secretary of the Council, to succeed Peregrine White '33, who tendered a resignation due to lack of time for the position. Richard Glover Ames '34, of Wayland, was appointed by Saltonstall as the member of the Student Council to take charge of Freshman affairs. E.F. Bowditch '35 will assist Ames in this work, which consists chiefly in cooperating with the Union Committee, and in conducting the class elections...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BANCROFT, AMES TO OCCUPY POSTS ON STUDENT COUNCIL | 10/5/1932 | See Source »

...Readville, a crew man for the past two years, W. A. Schroeder '33, of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, a member of the Kirkland House Committee, W. S. Sims Jr. '33, of Boston, a member of the CRIMSON Board, H. R. Woodard '33, of Indianapolis, Indiana; R. G. Ames '34, of Wayland; Richard Bassett '54, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; A. B. Hallowell '34, of Hyde Park; Atreus von Schrsider '34, of New York; Bradford Simmons '34, of Baltimore, Maryland; and C. A. Pescosolido '34, of Newtonville.COUNCIL HEAD ROBERT SALTONSTALL JR. '33--who will preside over the opening meeting of the Student Council today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STUDENT COUNCIL TO HOLD OPENING MEETING TONIGHT | 10/4/1932 | See Source »

About the time the U. S. entered the War, Publisher Julius A. Wayland of the Appeal committed suicide. Emanuel Julius succeeded him, changed the name of the paper to The National Appeal, endorsed the War, lost most of his remaining Socialist following. The Appeal, appealing to no group, faded out. But Publisher Julius remained in Girard, married Marcet Haldeman, daughter of a local bank president, changed his name to Emanuel Haldeman-Julius. To keep his presses turning he issued twelve little 5? books, classics of Socialist literature. Those were to be the nucleus of his famed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Kansas Freeman | 7/18/1932 | See Source »

...Melrose Highlands; R. C. Ber- resford '28, 2L, of New York City; C. H. Burgess '31, 1G, of Sheridan, Wyoming; W. W. Foshay '31, Henry Fellow, of Port Chester, New York; C. E. Galston '30, 2L, of Woodmere, New York; J. C. Hubbard, Jr. '31, 1G, of Wayland; W. H. MacHale '31, 1GB, of Douglaston, New York; R. W. Meadows '32, of Buffalo, New York, Vernon Munroe, Jr. '31, Fiske Scholar, of New York City; J. H. Pratt '30, 1L, of Washington, D.C.; A. N. Webster '31, 1L, of Lexington

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROCTORS AND ADVISERS FOR 1932-33 ANNOUNCED | 5/10/1932 | See Source »

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