Word: soled
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Wesselhoeft grounds on Harvard street, where it was proposed to build, will be given up in favor of it. No definite steps will be taken, however, toward building on either site until the petition has been determined. It has been decided to organize a stock company, which shall have sole power over the erection and control of the building. This company will have a capital stock of at least $300,000 and will place a considerable portion of its shares on public sale...
Arrangements are to be made if possible to secure one room in the Union for the sole use of the debating clubs...
Everyone associates with Knossos the old legend of the Labyrinth and its Minotaur. The atr cities of this legend however were recognized in Plutarch's day as inventions, due chiefly to Athenian patriotism, which glorified Theseus at the expense of Minos. Nevertheless, Minos is in reality the sole and genuine embodiment of the political greatness achieved in Mycenaean days, just as Daedalus, the architect of Minos, impersonates the marvellous skill in handicrafts and arts that marked the days when Minos ruled the sea. Both of them are strangely metamorphosed by many whimsical legends which bear more or less on Knossian...
...cannot be wholly responsible for the education of our children. The individual home and the community are jointly responsible with the school for the education of every child. Nevertheless, the school must carry the largest share of this responsibility, because it is the institution which society charges with the sole function of education, while the home and other institutions of society have many other functions. It is therefore the business of the school to cast the more or less vague desires of the community respecting education into definite aims, and to find, organize and administer the means through which these...
...election to the Cercle, for instance, by simply applying to the secretary? They hesitate in making application and consequently remain inactive; and they trust that they may squeeze through somehow, ignorant that a knowledge of French or the passing of French 2a are practically the sole requisites for election. The idea of admission, in this case as in most of the others, is good in itself. The fault lies in the lack of placing it before the undergraduates. Is there no way of advertising these requirements, either in the CRIMSON or in the College Catalogue? As it stands now many...