Word: west
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Freshman association football team will play the Norwegian Athletic Club of West Somerville in the fourth game of the season on Soldiers Field this afternoon at 3 o'clock. The team lost the first two games, to the Prospect Union and Andover, but the eleven has been developing rapidly, and last week defeated Middlesex by the score of 3 to 1. The work of Captain Lucas in the backfield and of Preston at goal has been especially good...
...Freshman team will line up as follows: g., Preston; l.f., Thurber; r.f., Myers; c.h.b., Lucas; r.h.b., Bushnell; l.h.b., Florence; c., West; l.i.f., Harris; r.i.f., Mitton; r.o.f., Zukoski; l.o.f., Heppinheimer...
...York and she is also secretary of the National Consumers' League which has done so mush in the past year for the establishment of open markets. At times in her career as a social worker she has been a lawyer and a factory inspector in the middle West and New York...
Before it becomes too late to make the necessary adjustments, the matter of lengthening the Christmas recess should be considered by the University. The present custom of allowing eleven days works a hardship upon men whose homes are in the South and West. And yet although more men come to Harvard from a distance than to any other eastern college, they are allowed the shortest of Christmas vacations. Students at Yale, Princeton, and Cornell have from five to eight days more recess than the University allows...
...only vacation offering any possibility of a visit home, it has another disadvantage. It does not allow time for men from the western Mississippi Valley and beyond to reach their homes by Christmas day or to remain for New Year's. And the latter is, especially in the West, almost as great a holiday as the former. To be sure, the Office often allows an extra day or two for such men, but this requires cutting, besides being inconsistent in assuming that western men can afford to miss a few hours' instruction, the omission of which would be fatal...