Word: pittsburg
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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According to the terms of the will of the late Henry Clary Frick of Pittsburg, ironmaster and art collector, the University will receive $5,000,000. This bequest is one of 19 left to public institutions, the largest of these being $15,000,000 to Princeton University. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology also receives...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology is sending the largest number of competitors, while the University comes fifth with 45 men entered. The names of the other colleges with the number of men entered is as follows: Yale, 58; Cornell, 52; Princeton, 48; Pennsylvania, 37; Pittsburg, 30; Johns Hopkins, 24; Lafayette, 22; Michigan, 21; Fordham, 20; Columbia, 19; Swarthmore, 11; Amherst, 11; New York University, 10; Syracuse, 10; Rutgers, 9; Bowdoin, 8; Georgetown, 6; Maine, 6; and Haverford...
...Since the last meeting of the Associated Clubs in Pittsburg, the question of the Harvard Endowment Fund has been crystallizing," stated Mr. Burlingham, "and the share of the clubs in this movement is so vital that the matter will receive our very earnest consideration and our heartiest support...
Gordon Willard Allport, of Cleveland, O.; Herman Caplan, of Pittsburg, Pa.; Robert Pierce Casey, of Dorchester; Albert Francis Cummings; of Dorchester; Harry Hyman Fein, of Dorchester; Carleton Perry Fuller, of Mansfield, Mass.; Edward Randolph Gay, of Cam- bridge; Thomas Harold Greene, of Dorchester; Richard M. Gudeman, of Chicago, Ill.; Martin Luther Hope, of Colorado Springs, Col.; Norman McKee Lang, of Oakland, Cal.; John Thomas Noonan, of Great Barrington, Mass.; Francis Parkman, of Boston; Earl Bryan Schwulst, of Farmersville, Tex.; Saul Yesner, of Dorchester...
First Marshal, Henry Alpern, of Pittsburg, Pa.; Second Marshal, Crane Brinton, of Springfield, Mass