Word: helping
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...university spirit. There is constantly at work in the mind of nearly every undergraduate a more or less definite desire, bred in the course of his general intellectual development, to become more catholic in his sympathies and thought. It is part of his natural growth and a university should help him in it; if it fails to help him fully in that then perhaps it would have been better for the American community if he had gone into business life from his preparatory school. It is this desire for a broadening of the horizon of sympathies, for contact between northerner...
...shown indifference or lack of spirit in the past is not the question. The matter before us now is to beat Yale on Saturday, and with this end in view, it is the duty of every member of the class of 1908, to be at the game, and to help his team win. G. G. BALL. P. BOYER. G. EMERSON. L. FISCHEL. C. WIGGINS. J. L. DERBY...
...next point which the lecturer treated at considerable length was the attitude of the ethical idealist who aims steadily at perfection, and cares more for the quality of life than for its duration. It is a great help to a soul which is beginning to realize that human life is not finite to come under the influence of great man who convinces everyone that his personality, at least, does not end with this life...
...annual announcement of the Loan Furniture Association is now ready for distribution at the Publication Office, and copies will be mailed to students intending to enter the University next fall. The Association is designed to help students to furnish their rooms at small cost; it is conducted not by the University but by a number of men interested in the University. It owns furniture and loans it at a yearly rental of 10 per cent. of its estimated value, and every student leasing from it is obliged to pay the yearly rent in advance and to deposit a small...
...college curriculum should be made to help the man who comes to college with the intention of working, and should not be adapted merely to the man whose only aim is to spend his four years of college life as enjoyably as possible. The affirmative requires much more convincing proof than the negative has brought forward, to accept the statement that because the elective system has failed at Harvard it will necessarily fall in all other colleges