Word: group
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...parties for the Senior Spread should be formed at once and the lists handed in to the Senior Spread Committee, Hollis 27. The Boxes are made to accommodate not more than 8 couples nor fewer than three couples. Men desiring to form large groups of more than 16 persons should say so on the list they hand in, so that they may be assigned to adjoining boxes. Groups of fewer than 3 couples should apply for one of the tables which are placed in the centre of the Delta, the boxes being placed along the sides of the Delta...
...next year, is to afford for those men who have no apparent liking for or ability in any particular sport an opportunity for all-round development and a chance to discover just where each man's latent ability lies. This has been effected by dividing the men into four groups of ten members each, two groups in boxing, one in fencing, and the fourth in wrestling. The groups were placed under competent instructors, Mr. Foley and Mr. O'Donnell in boxing, Dr. Leslabaye in fencing and Mr. Anderson and P. Withington '09 in wrestling. A plan of rotation was adopted...
...grace; we need not, if we regard the act of ordination as a public recognition of grace. The service of ordination does in the church precisely what a degree does in a college. It testifies to the church at large that in the opinion of the representatives of a group of churches a certain man understands and reveres the gospel and the Lord sufficiently to preach them. It is a certificate of standing. But such ordination should no more deprive other Christians from performing those same Christian functions in churches than the absence of a college diploma should prohibit...
...second group of the series of "Lectures on the Professions" being given for the Freshman class will be delivered in New Lecture Hall tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock. The two speakers tomorrow will be Dr. Frederick Cheever Shattuck '68, of Boston, who will talk on "Medicine as a Career and Preparation in College Therefor," and Mr. Charles Allerton Coolidge '81, of Boston, who will speak on "Architecture as a Profession." The address will be open only to members of the Freshman class...
...provide a natural opportunity for men from the different colleges to meet for an unhurried consideration, in especially agreeable surroundings, of the vital significance of Christianity for the colleges and for the college man in his various callings. The daily program includes two meetings of all the delegates, group classes for Bible study, mission study, or study of social problems, and larger group conferences on life work. The afternoons are given over entirely to recreation consisting of an intercollegiate baseball series, a tennis tournament, and a track meet. The leaders and speakers are all men well acquainted with student life...