Word: notes
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...interesting to note that of the fourteen men who will start the game, ten prepared at St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H. Blackall, Duncan and Pierce of the University team, and Kalbfleisch of Princeton are the only men who did not come from that school...
...Covenants not to Sue Joint, or Joint and Several Debtors," by Professor Samuel Williston '82, of the Law School; "Legal Cause in Actions of Tort, II," by Professor Jeremiah Smith '56, of the Law School; "Should the Law Teacher Practice Law?", by A. M. Kales '96, with a note by Dean E. R. Thayer '88, of the Law School...
...election of the remaining class officers takes place today. It is interesting to note how many different parts of the United States are represented by the officers already elected, and by those men who are nominated for the election today. Heretofore it has not been unusual for a majority of the officers to be Massachusetts men; and indeed this is not unnatural, since over half the men who enter College live in the Bay State. Of the nine already elected, four are from Massachusetts, while two are Westerners, and three Southerners. Of those nominated for the remaining offices, fourteen...
...Wilfred Thomason Grenfell h.'09 gave the first of the four William Belden Noble lectures on "The Adventure of Life" in Sanders Theatre last evening. Dr. Grenfell prefaced his lecture with a few words on the sturdy Christian character of William Belden Noble. The key note of his lecture might be said to be an appeal to accept Christianity on faith as a guide to the highest welfare of life. When still a young man Dr. Grenfell came to realize what for him were the three great adventures of life--"the mere living," the medical profession, and a Christian faith...
...should like to point out one thing in this connection. It is a well established but perhaps little recognized fact that whenever anything of note happens in a large university, glowing accounts, often puffed with the bellows of ill-feeling, find their way into newspapers all over the country. It has come, as a result, that a university must guard its reputation very scrupulously. Give the public the least suspicion that there is anything out of the ordinary going on, and immediately the pack of newspaper reporters is in full...