Word: fined
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...case of war the members of the R. O. T. C. who are physically fit will probably receive commissions," General Leonard Wood, M.D. '84, stated yesterday to a CRIMSON reporter. "The enthusiasm and interest in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps is spreading and growing in a way that is fine to see. A great many applications for admittance are constantly pouring in. The number now coming in from Bowdoin, Wesleyan, Hamilton, and Union colleges is especially noteworthy. At Princeton the total enrolment has reached 863; and the students of the college have just petitioned for universal military service...
...Professor Frank W. Taussig '79, of the Economics Department, presented him with a beautiful silver bowl on Saturday as a token of their esteem and affection. The bowl is a replica of one made by Paul Revere in the 18th century and now in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. As Professor Taussig leaves shortly to take up his work with the Federal Tariff Board at Washington, his former students took this occasion to tender him a mark of their gratitude and loyalty...
From Dr. Denman Waldo Ross '75 (in addition to the gift of a very large collection of fine Japanese prints) 10 watercolor drawings by Dodge MacKnight; three watercolors, one by J. M. W. Turner; five important Japanese screens; two important Japanese paintings; one splendid Chinese painting of a Corean gentleman; and important examples of Chinese porcelain...
...interested in distance running at the Varsity Club this evening at 7 o'clock. It is especially desired that all men competing in the 220-yard dash, 440-yard run, 880-yard run, mile run, and two-mile run, attend the meeting. The subject will be "The Fine Points of Racing and Training." It is planned by this lecture to correct some of the minor faults which arise through lack of experience and are responsible for the loss of many races...
...were required to say what single thing in this issue of the Advocate has pleased me most, I think I should choose Mr. Robert Hillyer's "A Heron." Here there is artifice, certainly artifice justified by achievement. Here too there is imperfection, but of the sort which a less fine critical sense would have trimmed away, losing with it the suggestion which is now so clear of assured though careless power. The little poem has the sharp definition coupled with the large suggestiveness of the best Japanese painting