Word: comes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1920
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Massachusetts stands for, under a dignified name that gives it a setting more expressive than any other building in the commonwealth. The state of Massachusetts has always been one of the first to respond to any call, no matter in what part of the world this call may have come from; we should pay a tribute to the Massachusetts spirit as it existed in the commonwealth and as shown correspondingly by the sons of Harvard College. Let that spirit go on--that it may grow and increase everywhere and that it may help knowledge and light to come in throughout...
...years, increasingly liable to charges of incompetence and corruption, has terminated in complete and utter chaos. Indifference on the part of class officers, carelessness or willful distortion of truth on the part of poll-watchers and count-takers, short-sightedness on the part of the election committee,--all will come in for a share of the blame. But no individual culprits may be named; the atmosphere of crass negligence which overlies the whole affair obscures the cause of the injustice which has been wrought...
...political articles. After practicing law in New York for two years, following his graduation from the Law School in 1903, Mr. Sullivan became connected with Collier's Weekly, of which he was editor from 1912 to 1917. For several years he has devoted himself to politics, and has come to be regarded as one of the best authorities in the country on political questions and men in public life...
Subscriptions from men who do not reside in dormitories, however, have come in very slowly in spite of the efforts which the College Endowment Fund Committee have made to get in personal touch with these students. Although every means were tried to communicate with these men, final statistics show that in not a single class have these students, not living in dormitories, subscribed more than 28 percent. The percent of these men enrolled in each class was as follows: 1921, 28 percent; 1922, 14 percent; 1923, 21 percent; and 1924, 20 percent. Consequently the committee requests that...
...great deal into the work and has directed a great deal of the mounted instruction toward perfecting a fair college polo team. An attempt is being made to acquire proper facilities enabling Harvard too, in the near future in the event of successful efforts, to come forward as one of the early colleges adopting the sport...