Word: pressingly
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...Castle Square), Beach 1520 Colonial, Beach 411 Copley, Back Bay 5518 Hollis, Beach 131 Keith's, Beach 1724 Majestic, Beach 4520 Opera House, Beach 5420 Park Square, Beach 193 Plymouth, Beach 4520 Shubert, Beach 4520 Symphony Hall, Back Bay 1492 Tremont, Beach 608 Wilbur, Beach 4520 Boston Papers. Associated Press, Fort Hill 400 Boston Daily Advertiser, Beach 7520 Boston American, Main 5180 Boston Globe, Main 5721 Boston Herald, Main 3000 Boston Post, Main 1004 and 7400 Boston Record, Main 2470 Boston Transcript, Main 6950 Boston Traveler, Beach 3000 Christian Science Monitor, Back Bay 4330 CAMBRIDGE. General. Co-operative Society, Camb...
...June Advocate and the Class-Day Advocate, fresh from the press, make a very strong finish to a hard year's work on the part of the editors. There is much good grain among the chaff. The Class-Day number contains the Class Poem by James Gore King Jr.--remarkable above all for its sincerity. One stanza every man in 1920 who hears it and every man in every other class who reads it will not forget...
...memory of their lives and services might be fittingly preserved, the Corporation some time ago appointed Mark A. DeWolfe Howe of the Atlantic Monthly staff, as Biographer of the Harvard Dead in the War against Germany. Mr. Howe's task is now nearing completion, and the Harvard University Press promises for June publication the first of his four volumes. This will contain biographical, sketches of those 30 men whose deaths occurred before the United States entered the war. The book bears the appropriate subtitle, "The Vanguard...
...territorial provisions have already called new states into being and profoundly modified the frontiers of old ones. This side of the Paris Conference forms the chief subject of the new book by Professors Charles H. Haskins and Robert H. Lord ("Some Problems of the Peace Conference." Harvard University Press...
...first volume of the series, to be published next fall and now in the press, is President Alexander Meiklejohn's "The Liberal College," a collection of his papers and addresses on educational problems, which will command much attention. Two other books are nearly ready for publication: Professor John F. Genung's "The Life Indeed,' his last and perhaps most characteristic work, which was found among his papers after his death, and Professor Anson D. Morse's "Parties and Party Leaders," a collection of his best political essays, which were published in various periodicals. Other volumes are in preparation