Word: gone
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...answered. University presidents throughout the country are in general conspicuous advocates of preparation for defense. President Lowell has consistently supported the movement; President Hibben of Princeton, in an article reprinted in the Illustrated, urges Princetonians to take advantage of the summer military camps; and President Hadley has gone so far as to suggest the advisability of military instruction at Yale...
...registration at Oxford last year was 629, against 1,033 the year before. This year it has not gone above 300. The loss of students' fees seriously cripples the university. The separate colleges are making contributions to the general fund, which has also been enriched by the private generosity of professors and others...
...these two elevens opposing the University in the last two games of the year. Brown, after an unpromising start has developed rapidly, defeating Williams and Vermont with ease and holding Syracuse to a 6 to 0 score. Yale's showing will be closely followed, for the blue team has gone through a complete re-organization this week...
Round-trip transportation tickets to Princeton at $7.75 and stateroom tickets at $1 each will be on sale in the Thayer Common Room today from 11 to 2 o'clock and until 6 o'clock tomorrow. The 50-cent stateroom berths are all gone, but a large number of $1 reservations are still on hand. Anyone wishing a stateroom should apply with someone else, as no assignment of rooms will be made to single applicants. The red handkerchiefs for the "H" during the Marseillaise can also be procured at the Thayer Common Room. Holders of tickets marked "Red Handkerchief" must...
...unfortunate fact that in these mercenary days there occasionally appear strong plays that have "gone wrong." "Outcast," which had its Boston premier at the Hollis Theatre last night, is just such a play. It should have ended at the close of the third act, but, evident deference to the box office, which is still apt to insist that a play should end happily, resulted in a fourth act of stereotyped reconciliation and happy conclusion. That the play was not ruined by the anti-climax in this act, is proof prositive that it is a drama of exceptional power...