Word: though
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Such a measure is the logical remedy for our present confusion. Instead of allowing coal to become mixed up with railroads and the manufacture of necessary articles to be checked thereby, this board will see to it that industry works in harmony with transportation. Even though a regulator may have managed very efficiently some branch of our war activities, yet we cannot with any reason expect him also to have adjusted this to the plans of all the other controllers. That is a task which requires a supreme council. Only by establishing one can we obtain that unity of effort...
...condemned official action and advocated individual effort. Let every individual have it as his duty to economize coal and its derivatives. This is the only course left. We charge every student to feel this responsibility. Electricity is the product most easily economized, and we can do a small though valuable bit of conserving. Think twice before flooding your suite with unnecessary light. Where two thousand are concerned the saving of a few hours per day by each is not insignificant...
...work was started three seeks later than usual. Besides the handicap of ordinary war conditions, the insertion of a war directory was responsible for much of the delay, for it was desired to get the latest possible information on men in the service. This list is necessarily somewhat inaccurate, though the information is correct to the editors knowledge...
...this year in my war-shrunken class in "Composition" I have read three or four stories which seem to me better than any narrative in the present Advocate. If the fault has been with the editors in not utilizing such material, they should offer more encouragement to new contributors, though at the same time, if we may judge from the current number, they should be stricter in revision of manuscript. If the trouble has been either the bashfulness or indifference of writers, they should remember that it is good for themselves to be known to the public in any worthy...
...Class of 1918 have not returned to College this year, leaving less than a third of the Seniors to carry on the activities of the whole class. An increased responsibility rests on the shoulders of those who are left to elect the men best fitted for their work. Though an effort is being made to secure the votes of those who are in active service and away from College through the mail, it will be impossible to reach more than a comparatively small number in this way. It is therefore important not only that every Senior make certain...