Word: benefitted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...committee which will have charge of the Handbook for 1915-16, a guide published every year by Phillips Brooks House for the particular benefit of Freshmen, has been selected as follows: Editor-in-chief, William Joseph Hever '17, of New York, N. Y.; business manager, Wingate Rollins '16, of West Roxbury; assistant business manager, Cornelius Ayer Wood '17, of Boston; second assistant business manager, James Coggeshall, Jr., '18, of Allston...
...fourth of the series of 1918 smokers will be held in the Living Room of the Union tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock and not this evening as the posters announced. For the benefit of men who are participating in athletics which require training rules, the main part of the entertainment will take place before 10 o'clock...
...most serious objections to the raise in the tuition fee have been based upon a plea for curtailing expenses, particularly in the Graduate School. It is claimed that this department will receive by far the greater benefit from the increase. Examination of the facts will show that this is not the case. Princeton and Yale both have much lower fees for their graduate schools than for the college. Harvard alone charges a uniform fee. Yet the benefits undergraduates derive from the Graduate School are apparent enough. They take part in a large number of graduate courses; they receive a quality...
...their courses will interest them especially, or whether they are going to like the professor and his methods. The result is that nearly everyone is taking at least one course with which he is thoroughly dissatisfied and out of which he feels that he is getting little or no benefit...
...Goldthwait '17, is an able defense of an attractive sport by an enthusiastic sportsman. His firm belief in future days of intercollegiate canoe races may be a trifle optimistic; possibly quite impractical, but it is meritorious. The University offers many sports to those who wish to benefit by them, but the tendency in favor of major athletics or none is still altogether too strong among us. Exercise and recreation for the great majority who are not trained athletes should be our greatest endeavor, and everything which tends in this direction should be encouraged...