Word: effective
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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Seniors who expect to complete the requirements for the degree of A.B. or S.B. in the first half-year, and who wish for leave of absence in the second half-year, should send, before this evening, petitions to the College office to that effect...
...have heard a great deal recently in Cambridge and Boston to the effect that the elms in the Harvard Yard were being killed by the elm borer and that in five years the trees would all be dead. Two reasons are assigned for this: first, that the persons in charge can not come to an agreement as to how the trees should be treated, and second, lack of funds. It seems to me that if those in charge can not agree it would be well for them to submit the matter to some recognized authority on the subject...
Seniors who expect to complete the requirements for the degree of A.B. or S.B. in the first half-year, and who wish for leave of absence in the second half-year, should send, on or before February 1, petitions to the College office to that effect...
...sits hushed during the first act, trying to get into the situation. An understanding of the character of the "Faith Healer" is difficult to many and the failure to comprehend and unquestioningly accept the fundamental thesis will make a full appreciation of the play impossible. The point, the accumulative effect of the play is apt to be lost because Mr. Moody has chosen, for the central figure, a man, so little a type and so much an individual that he has too little in common with human nature at large to be readily understood. What we fail to understand...
...Cole's contribution, on "The Glory of Football," is somewhat too subtly scornful to have the effect he intends, though it may help to correct the lack of humor and proportion with which this matter is commonly viewed. Even the editor of the "Illustrated" feels called upon to justify the publication of a criticism of football! Both Mr. Cole and W. Lippmann '10, who writes a sympathetic letter, dwell on the spectator's aspect of football, while J. Waid '10 replies with the familiar indorsement of the game as a school for the manly virtues. But the whole discussion loses...