Word: yards
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...those holding spreads in the Yard on Class Day, will be charged for the canvas enclosing the spread at the rate of 10 cents a running foot. The college measurements will be taken and all work connected with putting up the canvas will be done by the Class Day Committee. Chairs may be hired from the Class Day Committee at the rate of 12 cents per chair. The Class Day Committee will see that these are placed in the spaces assigned for the spreads the evening before Class Day. policemen may be hired from the Class Day Committee to stand...
Seniors who intend to spread in dormitories should read carefully the information contained in the circular sent out on May 1. Seniors giving spreads in the Yard must tell their caterers; first, that wagons will not be allowed in the Yard after 12 o'clock noon on Class Day; second, that between 12 noon and 2 o'clock all materials must be carried in by attendants on foot; third, that between 2 and 11 o'clock, attendants will not be allowed to enter or leave the Yard with dishes, ice-cream cans, or anything of this sort. Spreads must provide...
Spreads will be charged ten cents a foot for the canvas fencing, and may obtain chairs, from the Class Day Committee at the rate of 12 cents each. Those spreading are warned that a spread invitations will not secure admittance to the Yard, but that Yard tickets should be enclosed in the invitations sent to guests. All bills for canvas awning must be paid before Class...
Captain W. Moore '19 will probably win both sprints, leaving the two other places to be contended for by E. O. Gourdin '21, H. C. Flower '19, and Jones of the Eli team. Moore is a ten second man for this event while for the 220 yard dash J. M. B. Churchill '21 and F. W. Hall '20 are likely scorers...
...Service will remind undergraduates of the existence and activities of a comparatively unknown college institution. Year in and year out the Memorial Society continues its quiet work. It publishes the University Guide, places tablets on historic buildings, and lists of former tenants in all the older rooms about the Yard. It collects detailed records of Harvard men who have died in the nation's service, and will exhibit within a few months a full series of their pictures on semi-permanent oaken panels in the Library. Every year on Memorial Day it keeps alive by a service in Sanders Theatre...