Word: parted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...great economic problem of the war is that of redirecting our national energy. Questions of money, finance, industry, thrift, taxes, war loans, ships, food, labor,--in fact, every special question is really a part of that great question, and must be solved with reference to it. We must manage some way to redirect our national energy and bring it to bear upon the purpose of the war rather than upon the multifarious purposes of peace. The first question which we must ask regarding every question of public policy, however detailed it may be, is: How will it affect the redistribution...
...Archbishop of York has come and gone, but his words remain with us as a revelation to some and a reminder to all of the great part our mother universities have played in the war. We have seen Harvard much affected, but compared to Oxford and Cambridge the changes here have been insignificant. The academic life at these English colleges is nearly at a standstill; only a handful of wounded soldiers and physically unfit still work at their old tasks. Many of the colleges have quartered in them some kind of training corps, which change the old atmospheres of academic...
...account of adverse weather conditions, it will be impossible for any crews to go on the Charles before the latter part of the week. However, the tank has been flooded and will be used for the first time this afternoon by as many eights as can be accommodated. Since the Newell Boathouse is not yet heated, on account of the fuel situation, all men should report at the Locker Building as usual, and those crews selected will run from there to Newell...
...mass meeting open to the entire University in the New Lecture Hall next Friday evening, March 15, at 7.30 o'clock. The purpose of this meeting is to arouse undergraduate interest in the problems of reconstruction after the war, and the relation of successful College work to the part which the present University undergraduate may play in such reconstruction...
Even if weather conditions are favorable this afternoon none of the remaining events of the mid-winter track carnival will take place today. An attempt will be made to complete the program tomorrow afternoon, beginning at 3.30, but it may be necessary to leave a part of the schedule over till Wednesday. At any rate, the 1921 interdormitory teams and the class relay teams will run tomorrow on the board track, and the broad-jump will be held in the cage. This means that there is still an opportunity for men who have not yet done so to take...