Word: commendability
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...undersigned earnestly commend to the members of Harvard University the building enterprise of the Cambridge Young Men's Christian Association. We believe that a substantial contribution from them would be a desirable method of expressing the University's interest in the educational and civic work which the Association is doing for the people of Cambridge...
...foregoing is published with the full approval of a non-partisan Nominating Committee. It should commend itself to any man who believes that in politics as in athletics Harvard stands for cleanness first, last, and all the time. EDWARD EYRE HUNT...
...revival of undergraduate debating by the reanimation of one of the recently extinct clubs is a project which should find many supporters. It should especially commend itself to those who are taking courses in argumentation and in public speaking, for such a club will provide the opportunities for informal debating which a College course cannot afford...
...early, we believe, to attempt to impress the members of 1913 with the importance and value of these things. Phillips Brooks House itself is a centre of philanthropic, religious and social interests which should commend themselves to many students in the University. To make its enterprises successful it needs a large number of enthusiastic and persistent workers from every department. In athletics the new class has the enviable record of 1912, with its four victorious teams, to follow. Undergraduate papers and magazines, musical and dramatic organizations, debating clubs,--all these offer unequalled opportunities for the use and development of special...
...call issued by the Prospect Union for men to carry out its plans for reaching the workingmen of Cambridge, for whose benefit the Union was founded, will commend itself to many undergraduates. During the past eighteen years, the Prospect Union has been doing a valuable service to the community by affording mutual and helpful contact between laborers of Cambridge and Harvard men. This has resulted not only in giving certain members of the University a better appreciation of life in that part of Cambridge of which they see but little and of building up through its members a positive influence...