Word: things
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...other fields. To be sure, we already have a chance to come into intellectual contact through intercollegiate debates, but this contact is far too insignificant in proportion to the importance of our intellectual interests. It is an encouraging step in the right direction, therefore, when we see such a thing as the intercollegiate architectural competition, which has now been established through the generosity of Mr. Lloyd Warren of New York. This spring Harvard men will not only have to compete with other colleges in rowing, track, and baseball, but they must also cope with Columbia, Cornell, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Technology...
...possibility of a consistently first-class team to represent the University. It has also produced a new enthusiasm on the part of the undergraduates for the game. As a result hockey is trying to emerge into a major sport. There are reasons for and against this move, but one thing is evident, and that is that the future status of hockey depends largely on this season, not merely on the success, but on the general interest, and the developments of the season as a whole. The CRIMSON hopes to see Captain Huntington turn out an all-victorious team...
...guaranteeing a straight-forward and consistent editorial policy. There are sundry new and useful items in this year's edition, among which I notice especially the geographical list of students. The convenience of this source of information appealed to me at once; for the very first thing to which I happened to turn was the list of students from a city with which I have connections. President Lowell contributes a brief introduction for the Register in which he points out the possibilities of the Council, and once again invites the co-operation of students in the great task...
Throughout his lecture, Dr. Grenfell gave examples of how Christ's influence works itself out in the lives of men, with especial relation to the professions of doctors and lawyers. Christ teaches that the effective use of learning is not simply intellectual, but that like our life the important thing is not what we have but what we do with what we have. Christian faith is not only valuable for the soul of man but also for his body, and has succeeded in eliminating many diseases through the use of medicine and in other ways. Cures and remedies have been...
...should like to point out one thing in this connection. It is a well established but perhaps little recognized fact that whenever anything of note happens in a large university, glowing accounts, often puffed with the bellows of ill-feeling, find their way into newspapers all over the country. It has come, as a result, that a university must guard its reputation very scrupulously. Give the public the least suspicion that there is anything out of the ordinary going on, and immediately the pack of newspaper reporters is in full...