Word: expressiveness
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...That we may perfect the songs and cheers which are the instruments of displaying our enthusiasm, loyalty, and appreciation of the work of the team, is the object of the mass meeting tonight. Every Freshman, Sophomore, Junior and Senior should attend not only for that purpose, but also to express his hearty appreciation of Captain Brickley. His loss has been a severe one to the team and it is hard for him to be deprived of leading his team in the final games of this season. We expect everyone to turn out tonight in support of the team...
...desires, and what the world needs is not mere "understatement and restraint"; the desideratum is that prejudice and passion be understated and restrained, and still more that the facts be stated and lib- erated. Let those whose privilege it is to be possessed of pertinent facts about the situation express them boldly and publish them abroad for our enlightenment; but let those of us whose misfortune it is to harbor only blind and unreasoned opinions (and vague illusions as to how American sympathies ought to run and why, etc.), assume that humility implied in "understatement and restraint." Only when...
...competition is open to all undergraduate students registered in a regular course in any college or university in the United States offering direct instruction in municipal government. The essays must not exceed 10,000 words and must be typewritten in duplicate and both copies mailed or delivered to an express company not later than March 15, 1915, addressed to Clinton Rogers Woodruff, Secretary of the National Municipal League, North American Building, Philadelphia, Pa., and marked "For the William H. Baldwin Prize." Competitors will mark each paper with a pseudonym and enclose in a sealed envelope the full name, address, class...
...student is permitted to take any books or papers into the examination room except by express direction of the instructor. No communication is permitted between students in the examination room on any subject whatever...
...Union. The portrait is the gift of the classes of 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915, and the artist himself, whose generosity thus made the funds raised by the above classes sufficient to cover the cost of the painting. Mr. Tarbell has at the same time wished to express his sincere appreciation and pleasure in the painting of the portrait and his hopes that he in some measure caught the qualities which have endeared Dean Briggs to so many college generations. In the depicting of the features in a moment of repose the painter considers the portrait one of his most...