Word: say
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...meetings in the assembly room of the Union to which all men interested, both members and non-members, are cordially invited. The dates for these are: March 7, 8 and 10 at 3.30 o'clock. The committee sincerely hopes that all who are interested and who have anything to say will come...
Since the death of Dean Thayer, warnings not a few have been made by persons and publications concerning the danger of depending too much on the reputation of the Law School and of not choosing a sufficiently "big man" for its head. Needless to say, the choice just announced comes up to all requirements, and ought to satisfy all critics and friends of the Law School. The great breadth and thoroughness of Professor Pound's scholarship has impressed itself by reputation upon men in all departments of the University...
...conveniently into our athletic calendar. Hockey, wrestling, and gymnastics have drawn only a fraction of the students into mid-winter sports, and boxing offers additional training for large numbers. Those who cannot compete on University teams have found a novel and strenuous way to bridge over the period between, say, fall tennis and Leiter cup baseball. These practical merits, confirmed by the excellent spirit of the spectators last night who evidenced neither a diletante "high blow" interest in athletics nor on the other hand an excess of violent enthusiasm insure the permanence of "the many art" as a College activity...
...poetry in the number is interestingly contrasted. When we say that Mr. Thacher Nelson's "Evening Prayer" suggests irresistibly the odor of the steam pipes in an Anglican church, we are not attacking it as a poem. On the contrary, it has lines which render it almost the most notable verse in the number. The first line of Mr. Benshimol's poem makes it memorable, while in Mr. Brent Allison the Monthly has a new and interesting talent. The last stanza of his "Moonrise in Boston," however faulty, is poignant and beautiful. In Mr. Poore's poem, an exceptional technique...
Since then the movement has spread rapidly. The universities of Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Georgia, Texas, Missouri, Ohio, Washington, and Tulane all now maintain departments of business. It is fair to say, however, that not all of these schools teach their subjects in the large and intellectual manner which is required for the professionalizing of business, the proper task of the business school. Yale has recently added a business school which gives a graduate year to follow the three years at Sheffield, the courses being modelled directly on those of the University. And Columbia now announces a graduate business course...