Word: attraction
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...that our musical world has been blessed with a successful representative organ, the Musical Review, and will soon be welcomed into an attractive Music Building, might it not also be timely to consider the assumption of a certain representative function for which the College has great need,--a College orchestra? In certain other colleges the official maintenance of a representative orchestra, constant participation and faithful performance in which receives academic credit, is not a new idea, and such orchestra-work can be found listed in their catalogues among the regular courses of their Musical Departments. If such a plan were...
...those who wish to try for the Illustrated as photographers at the Sanctum in Holyoke 14 tonight at 7 o'clock. Men who are interested in journalism are urged to come out whether or not they have cameras of their own. The scope of work is broad enough to attract men of varied or general abilities...
...though none the less of interest to the student body. Thus, in the present issue of the Illustrated, we find titles ranging from the Brunswick Lion to the origin of the hockey team; from student life at Oxford to the new stroke at Yale all of them suited to attract the attention of the reader...
Since it is in the main true that the topics which attract the most interest are those dealing with the immediate problems of the University, the committee deems it advisable to use the Forum, for the present at least, principally for the discussion of important undergraduate subjects, such as "Should Hockey be made a Major Sport?" a question which was solved at one of the Forums last year. Herein the Forum offers an effective -- in practice, the only effective -- means of ascertaining undergraduate opinion, and it is therefore an invaluable aid to the Student Council...
...different times during past years the CRIMSON has tried to make arrangements for printing an Infirmary list in its columns, but always it has been unable to overcome the argument of the authorities that to do so would attract needless attention of friends of the sick men, perhaps alarming them when there was no cause for fear, or suggesting that they call when quiet would be better than company for the invalids. Yet there remained the fact that men went to the infirmary and were simply lost for a time, to their own and their friends' chagrin. A satisfactory remedy...