Word: good
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Committee of New England has offered a cup to be presented to the member of the flying circus who makes the fastest time in a race from Springfield to Boston. Originally scheduled for Thursday the race was postponed until today on account of inclement weather and high winds. If good weather prevails the aviators, six in number, will start from Springfield about 9 o'clock this morning, and will arrive over Boston between 11 and 12. In the afternoon they will fly over the city, scattering Liberty Loan literature, performing stunts, ending the exhibition with a sham battle demonstrating...
...increase his desire to learn; stimulate his curiosity and his ambition and make him conscious of his mental inferiority. Why do undergraduates slave and work over their extra-curriculum activities? Because they make a direct appeal to ambition and pride. The thought that they may derive great good from these activities does not generally enter a student's head until long after he has graduated from college. Every undergraduate activity that is worth while has to be bought at the price of a long and strenuous competition. This competition is what lifts these activities from the level of social amusements...
...rifle team will oppose Princeton this afternoon at the Bay State School of Musketry. Ten men will shoot in today's match which has been arranged for a 50 foot distance. Captain S. K. Bolton '21, A. Palmer '20, and G. F. Jewett '19 are expected to make a good showing for the University...
...Hasty Pudding Club play, will be given in Jordan Hall this evening at 8.15. The show has proved to be one of the best the Pudding has ever given; it achieved great has success in New York and in Boston last Monday. The New York Times called it "Corking good entertainment," while the New York Herald stated that it was "cleverly conceived." A limited number of tickets are still available at Leavitt & Perice's and the Co-operative Branch at $2.75 apiece, including...
...natural history leads right down to the following fair proposition: Why not pretend that we possess that calm and bloodless self-control that the professors pretend to possess when faced with the crushing fact of spring? Why not? This vast effort may seem pointless. But if we make good our pretense as they often manage to make good theirs, yes, in the very Tace of spring, ours will be a great consummation, a true millenium. The barriers of June will be removed, and we will be in a position to say to our professor: "Verily, sir, the fact that...