Word: expectations
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Sophomores who expect to attend the banquet and who have not yet bought their tickets must buy them early today. Otherwise the committee will not know how many to provide for. Tickets may be secured for $1.25 at Leavitt & Peirce's and from the following members of the entertainment committee: T. M. Franklin, W. Davis, A. W. Gardner, J. L. Hubbard, T. T. Mackie, N. V. Nelson, A. W. Pope, R. J. Powell, H. W. Quimby, C. P. Reynolds, and W. F. Robinson...
...Radcliffe graduate. But this does not prove that good plays are not written by University men in English 47. Witness "Believe Me, Xantippe," by J. F. Ballard, a former Craig Prize winner, and E. L. Beach's "The Clod," now running in New York. We cannot expect the Craig Prize always to come to Harvard graduates--the important thing is to maintain the high standard of English 47 compositions. The interest and support of the University at large should be for English 47 and not for the individual author...
...Brown '98, Captain J. R. Gilman '17, and former Captain E. W. Mahan '16, who will talk on the personal side of the games this year. Plans for the spring as well as the fall practice will be outlined. All members of the University, particularly those men who expect to go out for football next year, are asked to attend. Candidates for the 1916 team will be signed up at this time...
...because they want to. When a man picks out his college, one of the most important factors in his choice is the presence of opportunities for earning money. In most cases the State universities, from Michigan to California, provide all the opportunities for self-support that one can expect, and they emphasize this in their literature. A boy graduating from high school in Illinois knows that it will be comparatively easy for him to make his own way at the University of Chicago or at the State university--easy, that is, compared with what he knows, or thinks he knows...
...their own special field. The difficulties of instruction in the various fields of engineering have been mastered; but the engineering training has not yet been successful in making students able to meet social requirements easily. To solve this problem several innovations have been made. One is to urge and expect students to become familiar with the activities in the various fine arts which are available in the city. A library is being fitted up, designed especially for students to use in their leisure moments...