Word: goings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...winter schedule of drills for the University R. O. T. C. has been announced and will go into effect after the Christmas recess. Under the new arrangement each company will drill two hours a week, with an extra hour and three-quarters for members of Military Science 2. The buildings used will be the Cambridge Municipal Drill Hall and the baseball cage...
Five hundred footballs have just been sent abroad by the Athletic Association for our troops when resting from military work. The English soldiers have been known to go into action kicking a soccer ball; Pershing may now desire to follow their example. The lieutenants may soon be equipped with footballs and in true Mahan style rush over the top, followed by their platoons. War is a constantly changing game and such a formation might terrorize the most terrible Touton. A little scrimmage in No Man's Land between barrages would also serve as a diversion to the worn-out doughboy...
President and Mrs. Lowell cordially invite all students of the University who do not go away for the recess to their house, 17 Quincy street, on Christmas Eve, Monday, December 24, between 8 and 10 o'clock in the evening. This reception, which is an annual affair, was attended last year by about 150 men. President Lowell's reading from the Bible of the story of the Nativity of Christ was followed by several other readings, among them one by Professor Copeland. Later in the evening those present joined in singing carols...
...combined University Musical Clubs will go to Fall River today to play in a concert to be given for the benefit of the local Red Cross. This will be the Musical Clubs' last concert before the vacation, since the trip to New York tomorrow has been definitely abandoned...
...English 5 and English 12 and English 31 and English 6 could give lessons to these editors; and there are letters from across. It is the duty of the Advocate to secure the kind of thing that college men like to read and can read. The editors might even go to some of the men outside their evidently narrow clique for help. It would be sad to see the Advocate go on sending good war-time paper to the basket encumbered with spineless imitations of what might have filled cheap magazines a dozen years ago. T. L. HOOD...