Word: one
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Major Flynn announced that from the beginning of the mid-year period until the close of the April recess, all lectures for the advanced course will be discontinued, and in their stead three parallel courses will be given. Every cadet in Military Science 2 will be compelled to take one of these three, but he may choose whichever one he wants. The three subjects offered are Military Engineering, Topography and Administration...
...topographical course will be directed by Professor J. E. Wolff, and the administration one by Captain Professor W. M. Cole...
Lloyd George's and the President's terms of peace are practically the same; they both insist upon the restoration of Belgium and the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France. The one real difference between the desires of the Allies now and last summer comes in the question of the fate of the German government. When we entered the war we were going to destroy the German government and not the German people; we hoped for a German revolution and with it a representative government. Yet our hopes in this direction seem farther and farther from being realized...
Every class in the community will be affected by this drastic measure. Not even the Back Bay bud will escape the pinch, for one clause reads that all dances, public and private, shall stop at 10 o'clock. Gone also will be the midnight oil consumption of the mid-year period; even the movie palaces will have to leave the hero hanging over a canyon edge on a thin rope, if he is so inconsiderate as to be in that position, at the tenth stroke of the clock...
...measures can best be undertaken is not easily decided. Each institution, knowing its own position, must devise the emergency action best suited to that particular situation. Princeton, for instance, will pay off part of its deficit by gifts from alumni, while Pennsylvania and Rutgers are considering co-education. Whereas one university is helped by the kindness of graduates to make good the loss, the other two plan to eliminate the cause by increasing enrolments. Like all plans, this must first be tried before its success can be determined. Radical curtailment of expenses, if that is possible, may be suitable...