Word: attractive
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...serious handicap in getting the large first year classes under way every fall has in past years been the fact that all of the students are unacquainted with the Law School's methods. Consequently the problem before the investigating committee will be not only to attract more College men to the Law School, but also to spread knowledge of the School among Harvard undergraduates. In this way a large part of each entering class will be familiar with the requirements of the peculiar system of study, and will help to get the entire class accustomed to the routine work...
...large increase over the report for pervious years. This year will probably not come up to that figures by a small margin; it certainly will not exceed it. This is easily explained when it is remembered that so far this year, there have been few preachers to attract unusually large audiences. As regards morning chapel, on the other hand, the outlook is distinctly encouraging. I think that the final figures for the year will show an average attendance of 120 or more, compared with 105 last year. This increase is probably due more to increased interest in the daily service...
...result Captain Brickley and Coach Haughton have found it necessary to issue a second and a third call for candidates. A man who reports for spring practice has an obvious advantage over one who waits till fall to report. If he is a new man, he can attract the attention of the coach and captain by his work; if he is a veteran he can keep himself in trim. A spring squad of less than fifty promises poorly for the team to come...
...election of Union officers today which should not fail to appeal to all men who realize the importance and possibilities of the Union in the life of the University. If there is any fault in the Union as it is at present it is its failure to attract sufficient interest on the part of the undergraduates in its welfare. This fault is both the cause and the effect of its short- comings. The annual elections have been excellent evidence of this apathy; the vote in past years has usually been small and sometimes undiscriminating. This year, there is an issue...
When one glances at the telegram reproduced on the cover of the current "Harper's Weekly" and reads the eulogy within, he realizes that these have to do with no ordinary man. If a tribute on the cover of a magazine in a shop-window can attract and impress the passersby, what sort of interest should the man himself arouse? Now the man honored by President Wilson's telegram is in our midst, and yet few men seem aware of it. Or is it Harvard provincialism cropping out again, when one of the foremost citizens of the world, a statesman...