Word: williams
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...election of officers resulted as follows: President, Charles Hall Grandgent '83; vice-president, William Osborn Taylor '79; secretary, William Coolidge Lane '81; treasurer, Richard Henry Dana...
Water-polo will be played at the University for the first time next winter. James William Davenport Seymour '17, of New York, has been appointed captain of the University team and games will be arranged with several teams of the intercollegiate league. Although final arrangements have not been completed, Coach Mann and Captain Fullerton '16, of the swimming team, will probably have charge of the squad, which will practice with the University swimmers in the Cambridge Y. M. C. A. tank...
...Gilbertsville, N. Y.; Orville Parker Johnson, of Yonkers, N. Y.; Hugh Joseph Kelleher, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Robert Morss Lovett, Jr., of Chicago, III.; Edward Holland McCabe, of Lawrence; Kenneth Long Maclachlan, of Melrose; Alten Drummond McLean, of Plymouth; Richard Arnold May, of Groton; Leigh Veasey Miller, of Peabody; William Brackett Snow, Jr., of Stoneham; Richard Jordan Stiles, of Norway, Me.; and Charles Wilson Taintor, 2d. of Cambridge...
...formation of a surgical unit for one of the English field hospitals, which was begun a month ago at the request of Sir William Osler of Oxford, England, and which will be made up almost exclusively of Harvard surgeons, has been completed, and the party will sail from New York on June 22. There will be 34 men in the unit with Dr. E. H. Nichols '86 in charge. Dr. R. I. Lee '02, Professor of Hygiene in the University, will be one of the leaders of the group. The location of the hospital to which they will be assigned...
...June number of the Graduates' Magazine marks the close of Mr. William Roscoe Thayer's twenty-three years of service as its editor. In glancing through the pages of this issue, it is easy to understand why it has taken first place among alumni periodicals. The magazine is not a newspaper, but is includes, besides its various articles from men connected with the University, a complete account of undergraduate and graduate activities, so that it becomes as complete and accurate a chronicle of Harvard as can be compiled. Its great attraction lies, however, in the number of valuable literary...