Word: asking
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...them. Say to them, please, that I think we are dealing with the social question in the most healthy, quiet and manly way, and that if the Union prospers in its present lines, it will have a broad influence in the world. It is very strange that you should ask me whether I could propose any change of name which will show how close the Union stands to the college, for I was thinking of the same thing just before your letter came. It seems to me time to make such a change. The Union and the University...
...setting aside the question of the right and wrong of it, I do not see how any man can ask a friend to substitute for him. It is well known that in such cases the Faculty considers that both men are cheating, and deals with both almost equally severely. It seems to me then, that a man who can ask a friend to run the risk of a severe censure from the authorities, simply that he himself may enjoy a few additional days of vacation, shows an almost inconceivable amount of selfishness...
...dignified - and enters into a free and natural relation with all sorts and conditions of men. "The business of university men," says Dr. Hale, "is to carry the training which the university has given them in the infinite realities and in intellectual methods, to any persons who ask for their help or are willing to receive it. And at the same time it is the business of a university man to get from quick-minded and intelligent persons around him all the suggestions which they can give as to method and life...
...because it has been represented to them that there is this desire for information in the college. They come to Sever 11 to be of service to the students, and nobody but the students themselves can be to blame if they are not. If any man has questions to ask or doubts to solve he should go to the meeting tonight and have them settled. The Athletic Committee gives evidence that it comes in the right spirit. It desires to stand in a clear light before the college, and this conference meeting is a step in an endeavor to establish...
...observed with absolute strictness and it will be to the interest of the men in college again to take careful note of them. The management of the Musical Clubs, in exercising great care in the details of the new plan, are taking the surest means for success; and they ask the co-operation of the students in general. If this help is gained, the concert will be eliminated of every feature which in former years may have proved objectionable. The result should show in the most successful concert ever given...