Word: generously
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Europe. A committee composed of undergraduates who accompanied the club on its travels has been at work on the material for several months and all the manuscripts will be ready for revision in the next few days. Besides a complete account of the trip the book will contain a generous assortment of photographs taken by the men. Two prefaces, by Dr. A. T. Davison '06, director of the club, and Professor E. C. Moore, who was the official representative of the University, will be another feature of the book...
...spirit of service, shown in the work for foreign students, is also exemplified in the social service activities carries n in our own immediate community. It has been said that Brooks House serves as a clearing house where generous minded young men in the University may learn how to make their generosity count in the most efficient way,--a kind of school for training in the art of applied kindness. The actual social service work is done mostly in the settlement houses of Boston and Cambridge, where so far this year over 250 men have been teaching and leading boys...
...Some generous political adversaries of Mr. Wilson, who are chivalrous enough to regret his broken health and are not unwilling to see him honored in his retirement...
Winter track offers a special inducement as a generous assortment of outside meets has been scheduled for the regular Freshman runners and all candidates will have a chance to prove their ability. There will be no cut throughout the season but all men will report regularly to get in condition for the interdormitory meet to be held on March 1. This will be open to all members of the Freshman class so the meet will bring into competition not the second string men as in the other dormitory sports, but the very best athletes that the class can offer...
...exhibits in various fields. No small museum can have a completely representative collection; and ours, in spite of its good building, is unable to keep on view continually all the objects which it possesses. These periodic display have a double value; they bring to Harvard special exhibits loaned by generous collectors; and they bring out, where all may see them under favorable conditions, the less important objects in the possession of the museum, which have to be sacrificed in the general arrangement. They provide also a chance for concentrated study of particular artists, school, or types, by bringing together careful...