Word: accountants
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...oldest social club in Harvard has broken a precedent which has stood for over a half-century. On account of the uncertainty of the national situation the Hasty Pudding Club has cancelled the production of this year's play. For a month or more the members have given their time for daily rehearsals, and now they have been willing to see their efforts wasted, and to forego the enjoyment of the later performances. It is a patriotic move and one to be highly commended. It is a full and sufficient proof of the Pudding's worth...
...University gymnastic team was easily defeated by Dartmouth at Hanover Saturday evening by a score of 37 to 17. The team was slightly weakened by the loss of M. B. Blanchard '18, who was unable to compete on account of an injury to his ankle, but was completely outclassed the brilliant work of Captain D. Campbell '17, being the only redeeming feature of the team's performance. Campbell was easily the star of the meet, winning the parallel bars, tieing for first on the rings and placing second, in the side horse and third on the high bar. McDonough...
Democracy is not the unmixed good which this letter might seem to account it. If democracy at Harvard would bring about a modicum of tolerance, tolerance of ideas of creed, social standing, intellectual ability, then democracy ought to be our aim. If it would bring about a closer relation of professor and student, a crying need at Harvard, it is true that the experiment of the Freshman Dormitories should be carried further. At all odds, a college less democratic than Harvard is hardly conceivable. JACOB DAVIS...
Captain E. A. Teschner '17 and W. H. Meanix '19, who were scheduled to compete in the big A. A. U. indoor track carnival Saturday night, did not go to New York on account of the threatened railroad strike. Teschner was entered in the 60 and 300-yard events, while Meanix was to run in the hurdles...
...Fisher, on "Our Military Problem"--shows considerable information and sound reasoning. The style is straight-forward and vigorous, and whether the conclusion is right or wrong, the argument is of a kind that deserves a hearing. "The Verge of War," by Mr. Rogers, is in the main a sober account of the necessities of the present situation. It is marred by occasional exaggerations and the style is a little too elaborate and rhetorical throughout. The editorials, which counsel calmness and independent reflection together with earnest preparation for all eventualities, are sound in substance, but here and there awkward in exposition...