Word: discussion
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Halls Common Room this evening at 7.15 o'clock. Coach L. Saltonstall '14, E. W. Mahan '16, and H. C. Flower '19, captain of the Freshman team, will speak. The object of the meeting is to rehearse songs and cheers for the game with Yale 1919 Saturday and to discuss plans for the parade to the field before the game. It has been decided to have the parade on Saturday afternoon instead of tomorrow as was announced yesterday...
...There exists in football today a situation which if left unchecked by our leading universities is going to endanger sooner or later the very existence of the game. It is quite calmly accepted as a fact among college players that preparatory school stars have their price, and they discuss, as though it were a most ordinary state of affairs, a condition in which preparatory school players have come to view the game as an opportunity of some sort. The impression formulates itself clearly that many preparatory school players have come to believe they have a price and are concerned only...
...Farmers' Club was organized last year for the purpose of helping undergraduates who intend to take up farming as a business on graduation and also undergraduates who are interested in agricultural economy, to become better acquainted with each other and to discuss rural problems...
...appreciate the nature of the meetings in dormitory rooms which Phillips Brooks House has arranged. The groups, which are small, meet under the guidance of a member of the Faculty or a student leader and discuss various questions. The object of the meetings is two-fold. They are designed to develop an interest, already in embryo, among undergraduates in serious problems of life and conduct. And they also have great promise in bringing students into closer touch with members of the Faculty, a number of whom have already consented to conduct such gatherings. One of the prices which it seems...
There are men in College who give serious thought to religious principles and men who do not. Those who do will welcome the opportunity afforded to discuss fundamental religious problems under competent leaders at the weekly meetings which are being arranged in the various dormitories. But it is to those who have not as yet thought much about the question that the discussions will be of real value. No intelligent man, whatever his creed and beliefs, can afford to be ignorant of the religious truths which have been discovered up to the present time...