Word: callings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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There will be a meeting for new candidates for the business department of the club in Brentford 21 this evening at 7 o'clock. More men are needed as only a few responded to the last call. Men are particularly desired for work in advertising. No previous experience is necessary, and the spring competition is unusually short...
...track management has issued another call for field event candidates for both the University and Freshman teams. Broad jumpers are especially needed. Men who come out now will have opportunity to improve their form under the most favorable conditions. Practice will be held in the Cage under the direction of Coach Powers, and all who can should report at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The squad lost heavily by graduation last June, and more men must come out if a well-balanced team is to be developed. There will be regular competitions in all the field events from...
Spring practice for the 1914 football team will start on April 1, when Captain C. E. Brickley '15 will issue a call for candidates. The coaches plan to give the men more real practice than usual. New material from the 1917 team will be tried out and given instruction calculated to fit it for the University team. Head coach Percy D. Haughton '99 expects to be on the field every day during the three weeks of training. Other coaches including R. T. P. Storer '14, captain of last fall's eleven, will assist...
...aims. Without being reactionary, the editors mean to be sanely conservative. They most wisely believe that the readers of the Advocate wish above all else to be interested. They advise writers, in order to interest, to seek material in that "field of experience which stands at the back and call of the average undergraduate." This, by the way, is the least "conservative" use of figurative language in the present Advocate which the reviewer has noted...
...municipalities or other forms of government for a degree, and the establishment of fellowships enabling college students to take time for such work. Whether or not these moves will be made, will depend somewhat on the men who are interested in the work and respond to Professor Hart's call. At present, it is true, the attractions of municipal or other government are few enough to the trained man. A betterment of conditions must come through those who are deeply interested, and it is from those that the plan should take its support...