Word: generals
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...before the first of May is another reason for paying attention to College work. The choice of courses in the spring for the following fall, while always uncertain, is likely to be unusually difficult this year. The Freshmen in particular will have to make the additional decision of the general fields in which they wish to concentrate their College work. These are questions which cannot be put off. Many will not be able to consult their families during the spring recess, and many more will have to make this important choice in the few days left them before they...
...training unit is established at the University, admission may be secured to any of the following: Cavalry Officers' Reserve Corps, Field Artillery Officers' Reserve Corps, Coast Artillery Officers' Reserve Corps, Medical (to include the reserve officers of the Medical Corps, Dental Corps, and Veterinary Corps, Officers' Reserve Corps, Adjutant General's Officers' Reserve Corps, Judge Advocate General's Officers' Reserve Corps, Inspector General's Officers' Reserve Corps, Quartermaster Officers' Reserve Corps, Engineer Officers' Reserve Corps, Ordnance Officers' Reserve Corps, Signal Officers' Reserve Corps. Application blanks may be obtained by writing to the respective sections just stated or to the Adjutant...
...Dramatic Club presented its spring group of one-act plays in the Hasty Pudding Theatre last evening. The performance showed the result of some extremely competent coaching by the new director, Mr. S. A. Eliot, in a general evenness of acting and quietness and realism of tone. Exception might possibly be taken to the sombre quality of all four of the plays produced. The curtain rose on a death bed, but the general atmosphere of gloom which dominated the second and third of the plays made the first piece seem almost a merry trifle. It is called "The Harbour...
...University has been arranged by the Special Aid Society to be given at Huntington Hall, Boston. Professor Albert Bushman Hart '80 will give the first lecture tomorrow evening at 5 o'clock, when he speaks on "Who Steers the Ship of State?" All the topics come under the general subject of "Government," and they will be as follows: April 11, Professor Arthur Norman Holcombe '06, on "The Inside of State Government"; April 18, Professor George Grafton Wilson, on "International Rights and Duties of American Citizens"; May 2, Professor G. C. Whipple, on "The Inner Life of the City...
This arrangement is planned to enable a large proportion of Freshmen to obtain authoritative information about the elective system. It is timely since every Freshman must, on or before May 1, arrange his general plan of study for his College career and select definitely three courses which he is to take next year...