Caduceus of Kappa Sigma, Količina 24

Sprednja platnica
1909
 

Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse

Pogosti izrazi in povedi

Priljubljeni odlomki

Stran 320 - Know ye not that there is a Prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel.
Stran 540 - In 1906 43 per cent, of all the women and 19 per cent, of all the men received honorable mention on graduation, and 20 per cent, of the women and 9 per cent, of the men received honors for special excellence in particular departments of the senior college.
Stran 90 - at Columbia, Cornell, U. of Pennsylvania, Lehigh.) The accompanying table gives the number of active chapters of the various general fraternities for men in 1883, 1890, 1898 and 1905, as shown by editions of "American College Fraternities'" published in those years, and the number at the present time. Active Chapters of Fraternities, 1883 to 1909.
Stran 269 - was read by him as an address before the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland at the meeting of the association held in Washington, D. C, on November
Stran 328 - No other man's fingerprint has the same pressure as mine, and I shall see that it appears on everything I handle, everything I adopt, everything I own. The gloves of party, of culture, of creed, wherewith men hide their finger-prints, lest they should be caught in the act of being themselves, I decline to wear.
Stran 339 - A new southern fraternity is Pi Kappa Phi. It originated at the college of Charleston, S. C, in 1904. A Beta chapter was established at the Presbyterian College of South Carolina in 1906 and a Gamma chapter at the University of California in 1908. Its badge looks much like that of Delta Kappa Epsilon.—Beta Theta Pi.
Stran 819 - and inquisition, is a species of reaction from the academic freedom which is our heritage. College men are to be treated as men—if they are still small boys, whose light must be put out at a certain hour and whose footsteps must be watched, they should be sent
Stran 85 - One other thought I should like to leave with you. I believe there is too much false modesty among the fraternities. Why should we stand on etiquette if we know positively that a certain chapter of a certain fraternity is corrupt, that it is inculcating vice and
Stran 823 - The college cannot tolerate the existence of any buildings in which groups of students are housed unless such buildings are in some sense a part of the college property. All such buildings must be subject to sanitary inspection satisfactory to the college authorities. They must be free from practices which the authorities consider damaging to the
Stran 820 - When made serious by acceptance of responsibility for his fellows, the American student becomes the ally of all that is most desirable in college life, and the mainstay of the administration. In many colleges to-day the fraternities offer the machinery through which the student body is effectively directed and controlled. "I have found," says President Guy P. Benton, of

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