Word: students
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...graduate alone for starting the work? Would it not be better for the undergraduates themselves to make the first move? Dartmouth men have set us a fine example of what can be down by undergraduates in this respect. The plan of campaign can be well left to the Student Council, as a body best representing the College as a whole. Surely every man in College would be willing to help a little. And it is not the among raised which is going to count nearly so much as it is the spirit behind the work. If the undergraduates have enough...
...gymnasium. It is suggested that the first move toward the collection of the necessary funds be made by the members of the University, and that the interest shown by them will induce the graduates to lend a hand. This suggestion is well worth the consideration of the Student Council, and if practicable should be acted on at once. Of course only a small per cent of the whole sum needed could be raised in this way, but even so, the amount collected would indicate that the students keenly realized the need of a new building, and possibly graduates who contemplated...
...meeting of the Student Council yesterday a committee, consisting of P. M. Henry '09, R. M. Middlemass '09, and A. Sweetser '11, was appointed to confer with the committee chosen by the Corporation to manage the two dining halls of the University. The student committee will not aid in the management of the halls, but will attempt to effect a proper student organization in co-operation with the managing committee...
...positions in various forms of missionary work, both home and foreign, to college men. Among these letters are requests from Mr. George Gleason '97, who has charge of Y. M. C. A. work in Osaka, Japan; from Bishop Stringer of Ontario, Canada; and from Dr. Samuel Zwemer of the Student Volunteer Movement in New York City...
...most interesting and eye-opening article on "The Wireless at Harvard," by R. A. Morton, shows what some of our students have been doing in definite, scientific work, entirely on their own initiative. This article gives one of the most encouraging glimpses of student life which we have seen for a long time, and does credit to the writer and to those whose enterprise furnished the material for such a description. Undoubtedly the position formerly held by classical studies and literature is now coming to be held by the political and social sciences in all our American universities...