Word: demands
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Ohio Wesleyan debating team won a 2-1 decision over the University spokesmen on Saturday in a debate held in Delaware, Ohio. The Crimson upheld the negative side of the question, "Resolved: That the United States should demand full payment of the Allied debt...
...longest trip in its history to meet the Ohio Wesleyan speakers at Delaware, Ohio, this evening. C. W. Phelps '22, R. S. Fanning '23, and M. P. Lichauco '23, who will be the University spokesmen, will uphold the negative of the question "Resolved: that the United States should demand full payment of the Allied debt." Because of the importance of the subject in question the H. W. Wilson Publishing Company of New York has bought the rights to publish a complete record of the debate which will be printed in book form...
...Congress has appropriated $2000 for a free-for-all Senators' trip to the very grounds under debate. Thermos bottles in hand and lunches on the hip the austere reservationists are becoming as little children: it is the Senate picnic. As yet there is no tradition to demand outing clothes such as grace out Seniors on their festive day but grant more time. When the fragments of the picnic have been gathered into baskets and the Senators resume their places in the councils of the nation, a firmness of step, a flush of youth, a clearness and simplicity of thought will...
Through the efforts of the Social Service Committee of the Phillips Brooks House, nearly 300 men of the University are now engaged in active work at settlement houses in or around Boston. The demand for this work is so great, however, that there are now over 200 positions in such institutions that could be filled by men from the University. During the late winter months there is an even greater demand for Social Service workers than at any other time of the year...
...commercial enterprise perfectly legitimate and calling for no defense. If football is to be a national sport in any such sense let it be so and let it be put frankly on a professional basis as it is in Great Britain. But that the public shall demand that the colleges shall turn aside from the purposes for which they were founded and shall make expensive sacrifices of the time and energy of their students and of their intellectual interests to provide a Roman holiday for the sport loving public is something which the public has no right to demand...