Word: group
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Bowdoin Prizes are divided into two groups for dissertations in English and in the classics. In the English group there is a first prize of $250 and two second prizes of $100 each; in the Greek and Latin group there were two prizes of $50 each. The Francis Boott Prize is one of $100 for the best concerted vocal music composition. The Lloyd McKim Garrison Prize is given for the best poem on a selected subject, and consists of the sum of $100 and a silver medal. The George Arthur Knight Prize of $30 is awarded for the best composition...
...memorial to his mother, Louise E. Bettens, Edward Detraz Bettens '73 has recently taken over the room adjoining the Peabody Room on the the top floor of Phillips Brooks House and refitted it completely. The room will hereafter be used for small group meetings and for quiet reading. In addition, Mr. Bettens has donated the sum of $2,500 to the endowment fund of the Phillips Brooks House Association, and has made a gift of several valuable paintings to the Fogg Art Museum...
...Instructors, head monitors and first sergeants will submit to the Commandant's Office, 1 University Hall, a daily attendance report (using the prescribed form) of their respective section, lecture group or company, showing those present and absent. A check mark (x) will be made opposite the name of each cadet present and "abs" opposite the names of those absent. This report will be signed by the instructor, head monitor or first sergeant, and will be turned in on the same day as the meeting of the section...
...cadet officers, first sergeants and head monitors. This room is located in the centre of the basement of University Hall, and is designated as Room X. In the pigeon holes of the wall cabinet will be placed the necessary blank forms, other papers and memoranda, affecting each section, lecture group or company. Here the first sergeants will find returned their reports which are sent daily to the Commandant's Office. The instructor's notes, problems, etc., which have been submitted to the Professors of Military Science and Tactics will likewise, be returned to them...
...maelstrom?' This is a question every intelligent man must answer in his own way. It is thought by some that Britain and France wish to engage freely a large number of Chinese laborers; this, however, they were free to do without the necessity of bringing China into the Entente group. She has no navy and her army is relatively a negligible quantity. In a word it seems easy to determine why China for her part should consent to a rupture of relations with Germany, but what advantage the Allies look for is not so patent...