Word: bring
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...confidence and determined to win. As this is the final game of the season for the Green, every energy has been utilized to build up a fast and aggressive team. The contest with Princeton, which resulted in such a wide margin of victory for that team, served to bring out the weak points in the Dartmouth eleven and to rouse coaches and players to great efforts to remedy them. Since the Princeton game, then, all plans have been laid and carried out with a view to winning from Harvard. This being the final game, the Dartmouth eleven will put forth...
...cities of Europe there is a close connection between the students and the opera. The students obtain tickets at reduced rates, form a large proportion of the audience, and so enjoy unusual educational advantages in that way. Until last year there had been no attempts at this University to bring about close relations be-between the students and the Boston Opera. However, last spring a movement was initiated that resulted in the formation of the Opera Association, the purpose of which is to secure for students admission to the opera at reduced rates. Thus the aim of this new organization...
...distributed by section heads. No ushers will be permitted to enter the field after 12.05 o'clock. Tickets of admission can be secured at the H. A. A. Office this afternoon between 1 and 5 o'clock and tomorrow between 8 and 10 o'clock. Every man should bring some means of identification. Ushers must remain in places assigned throughout the game. Men marked A stand at foot of stairs; men marked B at first entrance; men marked C at second entrance; men marked D at top of promenade; and men marked E on wooden stands below parapet...
...University soccer team will play Andover at Andover this afternoon at 3 o'clock. The squad of fifteen men will leave the North Station at 12.25 o'clock. Several changes have been made in the line-up since last week and should bring about a great improvement in the play...
...professional tutor, could be swept away, then the "conference programme" would undoubtedly be a long step in advance toward thorough scholarship. As it is now, however, the proposed plan is directly opposed to the policy of more frequent tests, urged by the Student Council, as necessary to bring about regular and consistent work by undergraduates. The Columbia scheme may work admirably in the case of men of high standing, whose work needs no close supervision, but the success of its general application is by no means certain. In any event, the working of the plan, if applied at Columbia, will...