Word: reached
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Social life at the University is within reach of all: The clubs for men of larger means, the common-rooms of the College dormitories and the Union for those of smaller means. For the former class, their club-mates. For the former class, their club-mates and their surroundings in the private dormitories are refining influences, and although a poor man may work his way through College, he is thought none the less a man. The craze for being the social equals of wealthy men, in contrast to Europe, does not exist among the poorer men in the American University...
...secretary-treasurer, Professor H. D. Wild of Williams. The executive committee consists of the three officers, E. K. Hall of Dartmouth and Professor R. K. Jones of the University of Maine. A special committee will, during the coming months, conduct a thorough investigation of the summer baseball question to reach, if possible, a common basis of action...
Under the direction of the Department of Geology and Geography, a geological field course will be given in the mountains of Montana during the summer of 1908. The party, under the leadership of Dr. G. R. Mansfield '04, will reach Bozeman, Montana, early in July, and, after securing equipment, will spend five weeks in the study of geological and geographical features of the mountain region to the south and southwest...
Three bodies of men are now called upon to state their beliefs and do their best to reach a satisfactory agreement. The undergraduates are already organized; they have come together and, in as quiet and dignified a manner as they were able, to have agreed in a large majority upon a common view and a common aim. They have offered their own remedy, and are about to send it to the Faculty, in the hope that that body will be satisfied in substituting...
...help? And the encouraging part of it all is that the number of men who go into journalism for what they can put into it is rapidly increasing. It is to be regretted, however, that the papers that have the greatest power for good do not reach the poorer classes who would be most benefited by their influence...