Word: efforts
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...measured for his uniform. The price of the equipment is $6.00, payable on January 15, but anyone who feels he is unable to pay this should consult some member of the committee at Weld 3. No man should refrain from joining for financial reasons, as every effort will be made to keep current expenses down to a minimum so that no one will possibly suffer the least inconvenience of that score...
...desire for a healthy social life. But if these things are not found in the country it is due more often to a lack of initiative and leadership than to an inherent defect in farm life. By the leadership of one man in a community, a cooperative effort to secure better educational conditions, and a stimulation of organized recreation and social life, would be carried on, that would greatly increase the attractiveness of country life...
...effort to get the greatest representation possible at the summer military instruction camps next year, the advisory committee of University Presidents is sending a report of the work of these institutions to all universities and colleges in the United States. The committee is as follows: J. G. Hibben, Princeton (chairman); President Lowell; A. T. Hadley, Yale; E. W. Nichols, Virginia Military Institute; J. H. Kirkland, Vanderbilt; H. Garfield, Williams; H. S. Drinker, Lehigh (secretary). The report reads as follows...
...whole class is needed. Since only Union members will be admitted, it is essential that all Juniors who do not belong to the Union should join at once. Special attention is being given to the selection of food and music, which will be the best obtainable. Every effort is being made to reduce the expense of the dance, and for this reason everyone is requested to refrain from giving flowers to their guests. The date of the dance will be announced later...
...that it has a craving for greater reality. The college student is a man in growth without a man's responsibilities; he needs an ingredient in his life of something beside books in order to make his books themselves seem real to him; he needs a dash of physical effort and even risk. And there is nothing, at present, except the more strenuous phases of athletics that can supply this want. If the college man's play looks to an outsider like the most earnest and whole-hearted thing that he ever does, it is because this play...