Word: live
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...Where to live next year is an especially important question for the class of 1913. Since the management of the Senior Dormitories has been left to the classes an increasing number of men has lived in the Yard during their last year of undergraduate life. The instal- Lation of modern conveniences in all the Senior Dormitories has eliminated the objection formerly held against them...
...duty of every present Junior to live in the Yard next year. Unity is best effected by concentration of the class. This has been the experience of classes before ours. Men who live in the Yard now should move into the Senior Dormitories. They will find better equipments. Men living at home should spend the last year left to them with their class. No man whose time is divided between his home and his college can hope to get into the spirit of undergraduate life. It is in the evenings that much of the best in college life is seen...
...Senior Yard dormitories deserves present consideration. The Christmas vacation affords an excellent chance for Juniors to discuss with the members of their families at home, the advisability of rooming in the Yard next year--in fact it is probably the only such opportunity that will occur for those who live at some distance from Cambridge before they will be called upon to make their decision. Last year the applications for Yard rooms were due from the class of 1912 the day before the mid-year examination period, and it is likely that they will be required at about the same...
...States are represented by the officers already elected, and by those men who are nominated for the election today. Heretofore it has not been unusual for a majority of the officers to be Massachusetts men; and indeed this is not unnatural, since over half the men who enter College live in the Bay State. Of the nine already elected, four are from Massachusetts, while two are Westerners, and three Southerners. Of those nominated for the remaining offices, fourteen of the twenty-seven come from without this state; two come from other New England states, six from New York and Pennsylvania...
Efforts are being made to teach the people to live with more comfort. Along the coast, for example, woolen weaving has been established so that during the winter the women can make clothes, and agricultural stations have been located in the less barren parts of the country where experiments are made. Lumber mills have been established, and several peat bogs have been opened. In a word, the most is being made out of the limited resources of the country...