Word: attractable
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...different times during past years the CRIMSON has tried to make arrangements for printing an Infirmary list in its columns, but always it has been unable to overcome the argument of the authorities that to do so would attract needless attention of friends of the sick men, perhaps alarming them when there was no cause for fear, or suggesting that they call when quiet would be better than company for the invalids. Yet there remained the fact that men went to the infirmary and were simply lost for a time, to their own and their friends' chagrin. A satisfactory remedy...
...advertised increase of fifty cents in the membership fee, while not large, will attract much attention and comment, inasmuch as it seems to depart from the first purpose of the organization to make seats available for men who cannot ordinarily afford them. When this argument was advanced to the officers of the association, however, they assured us that in return for the raise a large additional service will be rendered. If this actually proves to be the case, then the change will be justified. The officers should understand the situation better than anyone else, and so their decision should...
...stage representation of "Evangeline," which opened at the Park Theatre in New York on Saturday evening last, has some special interest for these living in the vicinity of the Longfellow home, and it will doubtless attract many Harvard men when, in a few weeks, it is brought to Boston. The first night in New York was largely an invitation production. Among the guests present were a few of the Harvard Faculty, several of the faculty of Columbia and instructors from other colleges. Mr. Arthur Hopkins, the producer of the play, is a Cornell graduate. Mr. G. R Bunker '10, recently...
...nature of things that Dr. Fitz should have built up an exceptionally lucrative practice. His contributions were more in the individual and the scientific order. Nor did the material things of his profession attract him. His manner of life remained throughout, simple, with just a dash of Puritan austerity. He was so much more interested in his profession than in the outward shows of life that he apparently gave them little thought or none. His quiet, sober achievement and its great contribution to the sum of human happiness prompts once more to acknowledgment of that sturdy quality...
Analyzing the preliminary registration figures at American universities this year, several features attract attention. The first is that Columbia will open on Wednesday with an enrollment exceeding 10,000. That breaks all American records, and places the metropolitan university in point of registration in the same class with the largest institutions of learning of the Old World. The University of Berlin will probably maintain its lead for a few years to come, but the rapidity of growth among American universities promises soon to transfer the leadership in numbers from Berlin to Columbia. Whatever may be said regarding the relative value...