Word: centrales
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...galley which will take a central part in the Technology pageant has reached Boston and is now anchored in the Charles River Basin. It is named the Bucentaur and is patterned after the stately Venetian galleys of old. It was built expressly to take part in the water festival in connection with the opening of the new Massachusetts Institute of Technology buildings next Wednesday...
...proceeds will go to the Bazaar, now being held in the Grand Central Palace, New York, which is raising funds for the war relief of the Allies. The entire country is participating, and it is expected that more than a million dollars will be raised. Besides naming a planet for a college, voting is being held to determine the name of what city will be given to another of Professor Metcalfe's planets, while shares are being sold for the privilege of naming a third heavenly body as the winner may decide...
...Chicago University; Professor N. G. McCrea, of Columbia; Professor C. W. Mendell, of Yale; Professor D. R. Stuart, of Princeton; Professor M. N. Wetmore, of Williams; Miss S. B. Franklin, of Ethical Culture School, New York, N. Y.; Professor J. C. Kirtland, of Exeter; Mr. W. V. McDuffee, of Central High School, Springfield, Mass.; Dr. B. W. Mitchell, of Central High School, Philadelphia, Pa.; and Dr. J. W. Warnock, of Hill School, Pottstown...
...Bazaar, which will be held at the Grand Central Palace, is expected to raise over a million dollars for war relief in the Allied nations, and the whole country is participating. Another contest will be held to determine the name of what city will be given to one of the planets and the selling of shares for the privilege of naming one of them as the winner chooses...
...planet to be named was recently discovered by Professor Joel H. Metcalf, of Winchester, and presented to the Allied Bazaar, which opened Saturday in the Grand Central Palace, New York. The college contributing the greatest number of votes will give the asteroid its name. The committee in charge consists of Professor Henry Norris Russell, director of the Princeton Observatory, and Hamilton Fish Strong. Working in conjunction with them are the various college newspapers, which are running branch contests to decide whether the name of the new planet will be Harvardiana, Yalensis, Tiga, Columbiana, Cornellia, or Pennsylvania. Princeton was not selected...