Word: never
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Parsons '17, baseball; and A. E. MacDougall '17, hockey manager will receive the University letter under this ruling. C. D. Murray '19, and E. D. Morse '19, who has recently been killed in France, were awarded the "H" as men who had won their second assistant managerships, but had never succeeded to the position of manager of football and baseball, respectively, because of the cancellation of schedules...
Recent events in Paris have brought even more clearly to our attention an essential fact that the probable formation of a League of Nations tempts us constantly to forget: namely, that though war may be restricted, reduced in intensity, limited in size and scope, it can never be forever eradicated from this planet as long as man remains warm-blooded, and ideals and principles of right endure for him to defend...
...whether the Brooks House has been as successful as usual; and if the test of success is to be found in the ability to adapt itself to meet new and constantly changing conditions and in the amount of good done by the organization, certainly the results are encouraging. Never before has the House itself been used by so many people and by so many organizations as during the period covered by this report; and in spite of the fact that so large a proportion of men formerly associated with Brooks House have been absent in service and that the support...
...high order in weekly plays given by the 47 Workshop in the Hasty Pudding Theatre. About $40,000 was collected from the S. A. T. C. as part of the United War Works Campaign, and four hundred subscriptions were secured in a brief membership campaign for the Red Cross. "Never before," the President's report tells us, "has the House itself been used by so many people and so many organizations" as during the year just past...
...expenditure of Mr. Raffalovich's gifts nor the time of the paper maker and the typesetter. Mr. Raffalovich should remember, too, that ever since a certain person, named Defoe, for a few days fooled all the world, critics have justly asked whether irony from which the veil is never once lifted is, after all, quite fair...