Word: without
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...immaterial. The fact remains there is marked inefficiency in the War Department. The sooner we can weed out this element the sooner we can begin real fighting. The Allies are counting on our guns, our shells and our men to win this war; we have the men, but without arms they are useless. The Lewis gun scandal was apparently not sufficient to stir our Ordnance heads; if the present trouble does not wake them from their coma there ought to be a general house-cleaning in the War Department...
...likewise most necessary to reconstruct and reorganize completely and immediately a port of so great importance to Canada and to the Allies. We are not asked to deprive ourselves of our entire fortunes for this cause. But let each student consider carefully before he allows today to pass by without giving his share to Harvard University's contribution for the relief of Halifax...
...find it impossible to believe that you are taking your work as seriously as you should when you allow such an editorial to appear in your columns--an editorial that purports to point out the spiritual significance of the taking of Jerusalem by the British without pointing out its spiritual significance to the Jewish people; without mentioning the Jews in any historical, religious or political sense whatever, as if the two words--Jew and Jerusalem--did not connote one another; and without even recalling the recent promise of the British Empire, given when the ultimate taking of Jerusalem was assured...
...clock athletic class, which has been held for several years, will be continued in the new building under the direction of Mr. Schrader. This class offers an opportunity for anyone in the University to obtain regular and sufficient exercise without being hampered by strict attendance rules. Members are required to attend only as often as they wish, and need not remain during the whole hour...
...measures to safe-guard the University, and at the same time to help the country. I think that there might be formed a military college with a three-years' course on the same general lines as West Point. I would admit boys of the age of sixteen, physically fit, without examination, merely dropping them on their failing to maintain a proper standard in their stud- ies. During their three years in college I should have them under strict military discipline, with a prescribed military course, lectures in the morning, practical work in the afternoon. At the age of nineteen...