Word: draw
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...committee of five "Y" men has been appointed to investigate the problems of organization, and to draw up a constitution for the club. It is hoped that the club house will be ready for occupancy before the end of this seasion...
...peace prepare for war," is to be no path of least resistance for seekers of easy courses, but an out-and-out business proposition. Coupled with an excellent course in the theory and practice of artillery the University offers a carefully selected field of study upon which men may draw for their necessary units allied to the military work. In permitting the training to replace the usual requirements for distribution throughout the four years of college, the Faculty has taken a radical step in furthering the interests of military work at Harvard. Men may gain experience and knowledge...
...hoping to be able to found an institution in New York City that will keep in direct communication with workshops throughout America, and endeavor to draw some of the best material in them to the real stage. There are always bound to be a few highlights among the amateurs in workshop plays, and there seems no reason why we should not in some way get in touch with them and give them an opportunity for a stage career. A place cannot of course be found for all, but as in any other profession, there is always the chance for those...
...just had occasion to examine and copy parts of the actual texts of about fifty treaties for the last four centuries, and it is evident that the term "high contracting parties" is used in the same sense as the members of a debating society call themselves, 'we', when they draw up their constitution. That is to say, each member of the society is a high contracting party. Senator Knox says...
...open letter to the Harvard Board of Overseers--with its entertaining cartoon--deals with an engrossing topic. Everywhere increases in salaries for teachers are being talked of. Now come undergraduates to the rescue. Among the conclusions that no wise man will fail to draw are that students are after all somewhat interested in the training they get, and that the cruel undergraduate, though he may ride an instructor to death in the classroom, is human enough not to want the poor fellow's children to die in a garret. The last paragraph is perhaps out of place. "At Oxford," said...