Word: lived
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...they elect is real, that they are not merely big men, but men who will work for the Union; who will work for it not spasmodically through a vague sense of obligation to those who put them in office, but earnestly through a genuine desire to make the Union live up to the ideals for which Mr. Higginson created it. They should be genuine servants. With the opportunity to make additional nominations by petition, the Union members have only themselves to blame if the final slate does not satisfy them. The right sort of spirit, if the Union is ever...
According to the written agreement of Rule 27, the cup must be returned to the stewards on or before June 1. It is practically impossible to live up to the agreement owing to the conditions in Europe, and it is also impossible to get into communication with the stewards, since they are engaged in the war. It is a general opinion, however, that it would be satisfactory if the trophy were retained in Boston until after...
Last year the team lost only one match, that to Longwood, and the team this year promises to live up to this record. Seven members of last year's team have been lost by graduation, including W. M. Washburn '15, J. J. Armstrong '14, and the captain, E. H. Whitney '14. Nevertheless R. N. Williams, 2nd, who pressed McLaughlin for first place in the National tennis ranking, and L. Curtis 2nd, '16, remain for this year's team. On the University team in the intercollegiate meet last fall were, together with these two men, R. Harte...
...CRIMSON Prints two communications this morning on military training at Harvard--one for it, and one against it. Like prohibition, probation, protection or any other live topic, this question has given rise to two rival camps, ready to hurl epistolary missiles at each other, the CRIMSON serving as a convenient Belgium for their battles. Very little comes of such paper controversies. They are interesting as expressions of opinion, however...
...verdict can be arrived at until 1918 is graduated, and the effects on more than one Freshman class studied. The dormitories, without being "mollycoddle factories" as some sub-Freshmen liked to lable them before they saw them in operation, constitute a better environment for younger boys, than the old live-where-you-please system offered. Parents, who have hesitated to send boys to live "around," although such hesitancy was due largely to a distorted idea of the pitfalls of college life, will have no such fears in sending their sons to the Freshman dormitories. The President's appeal...