Word: firmly
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Certainly it is the firm desire of every member of Memorial Hall that this institution shall be run at its maximum efficiency. But if the service is interrupted and the food wasted as it has been on several occasions recently, no one can expect the management to render complete satisfaction to all concerned. On two or three Friday evenings within a month good lusty enthusiasm in the form of hearty singing and cheering has degenerated into unseemly contests of sugar throwing and mimic battles with bread. Such methods of expressing enthusiasm are quite beyond the bounds of gentlemanly conduct...
...conclusion then, it may be said that the co-operative store idea has taken firm hold at the American universities where it has been proved that by the combination of faculty supervision and finance, professional office management, and undergraduate support the store can be made a complete success...
...victory for Harvard 1916. The play was almost entirely in Princeton territory and only once, at the end of the third period, was the Harvard goal in danger. The Freshman team was well-balanced, the backs making gains at will both through and around the opposing line, while a firm defence made line-rushing unprofitable for Princeton. Three attempts at field-goals by Mahan failed when the ball was carried wide by the wind. There was occasional fumbling by both teams...
...post will probably be filled by Mr. Fitzroy Carrington, one of the foremost print connoisseurs in this country. He has been editor of the Print Collectors' Quarterly and for the past fifteen years a partner in the New York art firm of Frederick Keppel & Co. Mr. Carrington will not enter upon his duties until next year when he will give at least one course and will have charge of a collection of prints in the Fogg Art Museum. He will also be curator of the print department of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts...
...opportunities that the College and College life provide for the development of oneself through service to others, it points its moral clearly,--the necessity, if a man's college life is to be successful in the highest sense of that word, of self-control, careful thought, wise choice, and firm decision. In a single page, full of the rare spirit that for thirty years has been one of the greatest blessings of our College,--sweet and wise,--Dean Briggs opens the number with a talk about the Chapel, even better and more compelling than the good five-minute sermons...