Word: habitations
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...collection during the past week hopes that the books will continue to come in, as they will be needed as long as the war lasts, and the supply must be constantly replenished. All collection stations will be kept open indefinitely and the public is urged to form the habit of turning in their new books as soon as they have read them. More than a half-million volumes are needed at once in France and space has already been reserved in transports and freighters to send over thousands of books to Europe every month...
...will once more be held in Appleton Chapel. The removal to the Faculty Room of University Hall was a wise action from the standpoint of saving coal, but it did not prove successful as far as attendance is concerned. This apathy of undergraduates may have resulted from force of habit-our young men could never find their way to University Hall-or from a conviction that the Faculty Room did not have the fitting appointments. An average of forty or fifty a day is indicative, if discouraging...
...unquestionably the only scheme dear to the hearts of Harvard men, and justly so. Unless the spirit of this year increases, however, a few may become less certain of the wisdom of the Harvard plan. The removal to Appleton offers a good opportunity to prove that it has been habit or a nice sense of the fitness of things which has kept many of us away from chapel...
...must not imagine huge crowds dashing about in a state of terror, yet it is extremely probable that reprisals, undertaken on a people tired and keyed up, have been effective in weakening their morale and increasing their desire for peace. To the English, air raids are a matter of habit, and the defences are well organized and trainee through long practice. To the Germans they are comparatively new, and they cannot yet have obtained such an efficient defence. The attacks have been delivered in the great factory region of the Rhine, where the men and women, working...
...work of redirecting our national energy meets with many obstacles because it requires considerable change of habit or of occupation on the part of large numbers of people. They who have been directing their own energy and that of other people toward the objects of peace must, in many cases, be asked to rearrange their plans, their habits, and their work. The people concerned do not always see the connection between the change which is required of them and the winning of the war. Therefore they are sometimes impatient of the necessary discipline or restraint. Again, this redirection...