Word: bring
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...dreams. At the meeting this evening the opportunity is offered for undergraduates to express their views on the subject and to advance whatever solutions of the problem they may have worked out. This undergraduate opinion is exactly the thing needed. What is said this evening in the Union will bring to the attention of the University authorities just what the undergraduates feel to be the situation in regard to a new gymnasium and will show them how the students would solve the problem. The significance and importance, then, of the value of this discussion cannot be overestimated. Undergraduate problems must...
...Appleton Chapel Monday evening at 7 o'clock. There will be addresses by President Lowell, Professor G. H. Palmer, and Dr. A. P. Fitch. This service is intended primarily for all members of the class of 1916 who are not in the habit of regularly attending chapel. It should bring these men within its sphere and show them what advantages the regular service has to offer...
...veteran teams played have afforded the team excellent practice and have served to bring out the possibilities of the material. The backfield is good, Captain Barron and Rushmore, Francke and Weston, being men of ability and experience. In the forward line, Needham is a fast man at right wing and T. Hardwick, S. Hopkins, and D. Steele are all fairly sure of positions. A number of men from last year's Freshman team have also been playing well up to the University standard. Nichols at goal has played consistently all fall and will probably defend the goal next spring...
...Assembly Room of the Union on Wednesday evening. President Lowell, the first speaker, traced briefly the development of the University in point of territorial distribution of students, and outlined the recent attempts, through the New Plan examinations and Harvard Clubs scholarships, to "nationalize" the student body. "To bring men from all over the country to Harvard, and to take Harvard to them" is the immediate aim of these measures. The ultimate end, aside from all pride which we might have in the University, is the national welfare. To bring men from the south and west to this New England University...
...preliminary games of one of the most difficult schedules ever played by a University team hardly served to bring out decisively the possibilities of the available material. But the first four games did demonstrate to a satisfactory degree, however, which members of the squad would be the most likely candidates for the doubtful positions. Brickley, Bradlee, and Hardwick, the starbacks of the 1915 team, proved themselves well up to the University standard, and the position of quarterback, doubtful up to the Amherst game, was ably filled by H. B. Gardner '13. Coolidge, Weatherhead, and O'Brien all did good work...