Word: west
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Class Officers for 1919: President, Cass Canfield, of Roslyn, L. I., N. Y.; Willard Wise McLeod, of Malden; Francis Parkman, of Boston; vice-president, George Daniel Flynn, Jr., of Fall River; William Rice Odell, Jr., of Chicago, III.; secretary treasurer, Robert Ellsworth Gross, of West Newton; James Russell Parsons, of New York, N. Y.; Andrew Feld Tribble, of Kansas City, Mo Elected members of Student Council (four to be elected): George Carey Barclay, of New York, N. Y.; Alexander Harvey Bright, of Cambridge George Carey Barclay, of New York, N. Y.; John Richard Craig, Jr., of Boston; Denison Bingham Hull...
...McLeod; Cadet Sergeants: B. W. Thoron, W. G. Thorpe, F. H. Turnbull, R. S. Tucker, H. S. Walker, G. F. Wason; Cadet Corporals: F. Albright, J. T. Baldwin, J. F. Blackman, D. E. Brown, J. D. Kettelle, H. C. Tingey, K. Morse, H. C. Ward, D. J. Wallace, E. West...
...Reverend Dr. Paul Revere Frothingham, D. D., '86, minister of the Arlington Street Church, Boston, will conduct the regular service in Appleton Chapel tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. Officers of the University should enter at the north door, unless accompanied by friends, when they should enter at the west door...
Class Officers for 1919: President, Cass Canfield, of Roslyn, L. I., N. Y.; Willard Wise McLeod, of Malden; Francis Parkman, of Boston; vice-president, George Daniel Flynn, Jr., of Fall River; William Rice Odell, Jr., of Chicago, Ill.; secretary-treasurer, Robert Ellsworth Gross, of West Newton; James Russell Parsons, of New York, N. Y.; Andrew Feld Tribble, of Kansas City, Mo. Elected members of Student Council (four to be elected): George Carey Barclay, of New York, N. Y.; Alexander Harvey Bright, of Cambridge; George Abbott Brownell, of New York, N. Y.; John Richard Craig, Jr., of Boston: Denison Bingham Hull...
...distance unexploded "there might be something in it', but wouldn't it be a little more like "the thing" to figure that "c'est la guerre." Since the war started Lloyd George has shipped all London's red tape to "blighty" or as that Guy Empey might say, "west"; south would be more to the correct atmospheric direction. One half of the classes are at war and probably the situation is a case of shipping red tape even in such a minor matter as Harvard's class elections. Let us think...