Word: without
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...terms of this scholarship are different from those of any other. It is awarded by the officers of the class to the Freshman who has had the best record in his preparatory school, but who would be unlikely to come to the University without pecuniary aid. This record includes studies, school activities, both religious and social, and athletics, though prominence in the latter branch is not a necessary requisite. These terms are intended to give the impression in preparatory schools that there is here an opportunity for such men to come to the University with scholarship assistance...
...have purposely refrained from speaking of Germany's relation to other countries after the war but I cannot close without expressing the belief that the war will bring a new life to all the nation's engaged in it. May we not hope that the universal striving for inner reconstruction, the newly-awakened longing for a higher civic consciousness, the ideal of a national life devoted to the cultivation of the highest powers of the individual, will finally quench the blind passions and violent hatreds inflamed by the war, so that a regenerated Europe will more firmly-than ever before...
...much we owe to that courageous young minister, who, in 1638, left his library and half his estate to the struggling college at Newtowne. In gratitude the General Court changed the town's name to Cambridge, the university which John Harvard left in order to come to this country. Without his aid it would never have attained its early reputation--it might even have been abandoned. And, in partial recognition of our enormous debt to him, the least that we can do is to attend the exercises this morning...
...tuition fee to holders of scholar-ships which require a receipt to be given until the holder has called at the Bursar's Office and signed the required acknowledgement. Other aids and scholarships such as the Price Greenleaf Aids, will be credited in payment of the tuition fee without action of the holder...
...many times a day or week do we plead, "No time for reading"? Of course, it goes without saying that we can't have something for nothing in this world, and if we could, it wouldn't be worth much. Every day we pay some sort of coin for the things we want--and that without a murmur! If reading is one of the things we want most--well, just between us, don't you think the fellow who begs "No time for reading!" usually means "No inclination"--whether he knows that is what he means or not? Daily Illini