Word: one
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Carnival will open on Tuesday afternoon at 3.45 o'clock with the 600, 1,000 and mile runs. If the weather permits, the pole-vault, shot-put, and high jump will also take place. The 40 and the 300 yard dashes, and the relay race will be run off one Wednesday...
...yesterday by Colonel Goetz, who added that it was improbable that any other that an artillery unit will be a established here. In addition the War Department has announced its intention of establishing aeronautic units of the R. O. T. C. at all colleges and universities which apply for one. The college instruction, which will be a three-year course, is to be only in ground work, the technical side of aviation, which would probably be taught at the Engineering School of the University. Practical experience in flying will be given at camps during the summer...
...Carnival is open to all members of the College who have passed the usual strength tests. Men who have not yet had these tests should see one of the track managers at the Locker Building this afternoon. Contestants must register in the Blue Books at the Locker Building, the Union of the Freshman Dormitories before 5 o'clock Monday afternoon...
...permanent peace mind with the hope of all war, that many even of the most intelligent men confound the two, and criticism of a League of Nations is denounced as advocacy of war and hostility to peace. Nothing could be more dangerous than this. The whole subject is one of such vast importance and hostility to peace. Nothing could be more dangerous than this. The whole subject is one of such vast importance and so wide spread in its ramifications that it should not be determined by a mere reiterations of slogans and cries. It is a subject which calls...
...where we should feel that we need never again prepare ourselves for self-defense. It may not be in fashion now to speak of Washington or his Farewell Address, and it is true that we have gone far since his words of warning were first spoken, but. Washington said one the thing which will be eternally true so long as nations shall exist: "There can be no greater error than to expect or calculate upon real favors from nation to nation. It is an illusion, which experience must cure, which a just pride ought to discard." "A just pride" would...