Word: faces
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...urge a man to keep away lest he learn the truth? Is the position of those that oppose all preparation for possible war so weak that they fear to have a college man, who can and will think for himself, brought face to face with the other side of the problem for six weeks...
Built of brick and limestone the new gate will conform both in the material and general style to that established by Mr. McKim for the whole college fence from the pioneer Johnston Gate. The style of the tower might properly be called Georgian or Colonial. On the Yard face of the clock will be a large relief of Governor Dudley against a back-ground of colonial street and houses. The relief will be cut in American Travertine stone of the same color as the limestone used for the trimmings and ornaments of the Gate. The tower will be thrity...
...relative armaments,--a fact which those militarists who use the insurance analogy ignore. Any increase in military strength on the part of one power no matter how reasonable--is sure to be met by a similar reasonable increase on the part of other powers. The menace which we face is that of permitting this country to enter the European reasonable armament competition which has no other limits than the complete exhaustion of the resources of any nation which consistently follows the advice of its military authorities...
...Claflin's, and they showed up very well, Baker, in particular, playing an unusually strong game. He scored on a pass from Phillips after 8 minutes, 41 seconds, followed later by a goal by Curtis from the wing. A minute later Rochester snapped the puck past Harte after a face-off near the goal for Williams's single score. Baker, after cleverly dodging the Williams defence, brought the last tally for the University...
...formerly led. They have had uninterrupted prosperity, as a rule, and an increase of their own. Numbers may indicate prosperity, but there is a prosperity more substantial than they indicate. There is such a thing as an increase of quality as well as of quantity, and those universities which face a limitation of their physical expansion are forced to give their efforts to that. But both kinds of increase are encouraging signs of our national progress, and in them all true friends of education rejoice...