Word: come
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Again reports come in that colleges throughout the country have increased registrations. An enrolment of 18,173 students makes Columbia again the largest university in the world. This figure includes the summer school registration of 8,023 and those students who are attending the fall term of the University, including the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the College of Pharmacy. This registration exceeded that provided for by the trustees in their budget, which follows for 15,000 students. In Columbia College the enrolment has increased from 1,118 last fall...
...Bowl seats a trifle men than 69,000, including seats now belong erected, this means that 31,000 pierces will be disappointed. Applications close in New Haven Saturday night, and the figures showed that Yale had applied it 52,000 seats, the remainder of the 100,000 applications will come from the University and the public...
...University is fortunate in having so many foreign matriculates. The men here from other lands are the men, who, in years to come, will be powers in their own countries. They burn with a deep love for their homeland. Their impressions of America and Americans, to a great degree, are acquired here on the campus. We owe it to ourselves, to the University and to the nation, to meet and to know these students who are virtually our guests. We owe it to ourselves, chiefly because we can learn much from them that will broaden our sympathies and understanding...
...were touched upon. "This organization is unique," be said. "It is a pioneer in college dramatics. Other collages give plays that have been tried on the professional stage but the University produce play of its won, and as a consequence its productions and the men connected with them have come to mean something in the theatre. Only once in the history of the Dramatic Club has it presented a play not written by a Harvard man. And there is no better way to start a one-act play than to have it produced by this society...
...Friends of France" is the detail and the theory of that spontaneous and amazing action which culminated in the formation of the American Ambulance Service in France. With the coming of the war it was realized by all belligerents that their sanitary services were utterly inadequate to the task before them. France, particularly, who sustained, in those hurried days of September, the cumulative blow of Germany and who saved Europe, found many of her soldiers dying because they could not promptly be attended to. It was then that the American Ambulance was organized. Well in the rear for the first...