Word: largerly
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Since 1921 is smaller and its responsibilities are greater than any other Freshman class, each member has a correspondingly larger personal responsibility. What it misses in numbers, it surely must have in collective capacity. There is always more potentiality in Freshmen than in the other groups of undergraduates. We not only expect but we are sure that 1921 will not disappoint the hope of all Harvard men--a hope that it may shed more honor on its guide than all preceding classes...
...Institute's freshman class is larger than ever, 504 against 450 of last year, with still a considerable number who took the entrance examinations in June and have not yet registered. The sophomore class as now registered actually shows a gain of five or six per cent, being 433 against 420 who were in the class of freshmen last June. The junior class assembles with 358 registered against 456 sophomores in June and the senior class now calls together 325 out of 484 juniors before the vacation. These upper classes, instead of being "shot to pieces," come together with...
...Illustrated has moved this year to new and larger quarters at 1246 Massachusetts avenue and the paper will be published from there. A new policy will be instituted in the management of the publication according to which each number will be more wholly pictorial than in previous years. It is planned to issue 16 numbers during the winter as was done...
...sales during the coming year and consequently a decrease in net earnings, for it is not possible to make a curtailment of expenses proportioned to the loss in sales. Interest, taxes, light, heat, insurance and many other items will be as large as ever, some of them larger. The Superintendent and the Directors, in preparing the expense budget for 1917-18 have reduced the past year's total (chiefly by reducing the number of employees) to the extent of about ten per cent. It did not appear practicable to go further without endangering the permanent interests of the business...
...monopoly that New England has on the letter men in College is not due altogether to the predominant number of undergraduates from the Bay State; for, whereas, 1,432 of the 2,551 registered students come from Massachusetts, the number of athletes from there is proportionately larger. This may be seen in the fact that nearly three percent of the members of the University who are native sons of Massachusetts have won their "H". And in the remaining part of the undergraduate body who come from the 47 other states in the Union, not one percent have achieved their letter...