Word: founding
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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During the war, the scouts established an enviable record. They were found prepared to help whenever called upon, obtaining no less than three hundred million dollars in subscriptions during the Liberty Loan drives, fifty million in the War Savings Stamp campaign, and similar commendable records in other drives...
...stations. If those who have text books which they no longer require will take them to one of the stations, they will be doing a good turn for the men who next year will depend upon this Library for their necessary volumes. A better means of disposition cannot be found...
...this field? The external appearance of the paper would be improved, but would its value to the college community? Then, behold, the New York World and New York Sun are held up to the undergraduate CRIMSON editor as models. But has the vigorous writer in the Harvard Magazine never found a "vapid" editorial in those publications? Strange...
Even the most normally complacent and unobserving of Harvard's dripping sons would respond instantly to the suggestion, no matter how veiled or subtle, that yesterday was an exceptionally hot day. Many men, in fact, who had stayed in Cambridge expressly to study for examinations, found refuge only in what Professor Copeland used to consider in pre-war days the most thoroughly established of all Harvard undergraduate activities, namely, "sitting around...
...nearly passing the third man, S. W. Sedgwick of Michigan, in a final spurt. C. G. Krogness '21 tied for fourth place in the high-jump (which was won by R. W. Landon, Yale), with J. A. Ramsay of Cornell, clearing 5 feet, 9 inches. H. C. Flower '19 found stiff competition in the broad jump against Johnson of Michigan and Le Gendre of Georgetown, but won third place by a jump of 22 feet, 8 3-4 inches. Myers' record in the pole-vault was just 6 inches higher than that of R. W. Harwood '20 who tied with...