Word: bring
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Sophomore class will hold an inexpensive smoker on Tuesday evening, March 19, at 8 o'clock, in the Living Room of the Union if satisfactory arrangements can be made for its use. The officers of 1920 have decided upon this means to bring the men together once more before the end of the year, as it is expected that many will enter the service this summer...
Recognizing the duty of the University to render all its members physically fit for war service, it is the intention of the Rowing Committee to conduct the training so as to bring about the physical betterment of as many men as possible, rather than to develop a single crew. In accordance with this purpose, as many boats as can be filled will be kept on the river during the entire season. There will consequently be no cut in the squad and each man will receive an unusual amount of individual attention. The practice will be so arranged...
...strongly hoped that Harvard men will respond liberally. Smileage books sell in $1 and $5 forms, and surely every man in the University is willing to forget the price of a show or two for the good cheer which these Smileage books will bring to thousands of our men. Judge Lindsay says: "Smileage is not only an inspiration, but one of the most practical things in this war. Smileage will do more to keep our boys wholesome than all other forms of free entertainment combined...
...quality of students will be as high as it was in 1917. In addition, opening enlistments to preparatory and high school graduates who pass their June entrance examinations will not only give those men an opportunity to spend a useful six weeks of military preparation, but will also bring them in close and intimate contact with the University which they are to enter in the fall...
...which will be published by the University and sent throughout the country as an encouragement for enlistment in the crops, in case a plan for summer training is decided upon. All men who have any clear, interesting photographs of the R. O. T. C. in 1917 are asked to bring their prints or negatives to the Headquarters Office as soon as possible...