Word: yesterday
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Announcement of the appointment of undergraduate officers for the Union was made yesterday. The following were appointed: Undergraduate vice-president, Frederick Keil Bullard '20, of Revere; Chairman of the House Committee, Burnham Lewis '20, of Philadelphia; Chairman of Entertainment Committee, Edmund William Pavenstedt, Jr., '20, of New York; Chairman of the Restaurant Committee, 'Eric Alan McCouch '20, of Philadelphia; members of the Restaurant Committee, George Storer Baldwin '21, of Chestnut Hill, and Myles Pierce Baker '22, of Cambridge; members of the House Committee, Charles Albert Page '21, of Chestnut Hill, and Donald Angier '22, of Waban; members of the Entertainment...
Practice was held yesterday over the Belmont course for the University and Freshman cross-country teams. The University team was timed over the six-mile course and did unusually well for so early in the season. The Freshmen were sent over the three mile course. Among those who did well were Winchester, Bennett, Pratt, Tait and Howard...
...million dollars was the total reached yesterday by the Harvard Endowment Fund. Of this $700,000 was raised by voluntary subscription in Boston and the rest came from other parts of the country. In Boston the donors' names were not announced, but individual subscriptions included one for $100,000, two for $50,000, 16 for $25,000, five for $10,000 and five for $5,000. Subscriptions made through members of the various teams calling upon alumni in Boston and vicinity will not be known until this morning when depositories report to the General Committee...
...York's total took a climb yesterday with one more large subscription of $100,000 reported from George F. Baker, Jr., '99. Other subscriptions included $28,000 from Alexander M. White '92, $25,000 apiece from C. N. Bliss, Jr., '97, and C. S. Fairchild '63, $20,000 from R. T. Lincoln '64, $10,000 from R. L. Bacon '07, and $5,000 from Norman Davis...
...There is no doubt whatever that the French nation, as a whole, is heartily in favor of the League of Nations." These were the words of Professor Lucien Levy-Bruhl, the exchange professor from the Sorbonne, in an interview given to a CRIMSON renorter yesterday...