Word: among
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Following is a table showing the divisions of registration among the several departments: TERM TIME SUMMER College . . . . . . 380 345 Graduate . . . . . . 96 103 Law . . . . . . . 62 58 Unclassified. . . . . 41 28 Medical . . . . . . 8 8 Assistants . . . . . 5 5 Business . . . . . . 13 1 Divinity . . . . . . 7 5 Architectural . . . . 8 4 Dental . . . . . . 1 4 Total...
Thomas Carlyle, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Charles Eliot Norton were among the other who at the time of their death willed their own volumes to the College Library. The addition of Professor Muensterberg's books will help to increase the size of that collection which increases in historical importance as years pass. President Lowell's acceptance of the gift represents the feeling of gratitude felt by both students and Faculty. Far better than bronze or stone, it will be a living memorial to Professor Muensterberg's quarter of a century of faithful effort and accomplishment...
...could probably be enlisted within a very short time. But the sudden withdrawal of so large a body from the productive activities of the country would almost surely upset our whole economic organization, all the more so because those who are most needed in industry or transportation would be among the first to respond in case of a general call for enlistments. In this matter the costly experience of England should have taught us a lesson, but it has not done so. We have made and are making no efficient preparation, as regards the entire country, to hold back...
...seclusion instead of bending every energy toward active preparedness. The Harvard Union for American Neutrality should have been formed months ago, and then it might have arrived at a course of action before the time for deliberation had passed. What little influence it has had or will have among Harvard men during this critical period when there should be no discordant note of hesitancy is harmful and intolerable. For this reason alone the CRIMSON disagrees with and denounces the spirit of this organization which hinders steps toward immediate national preparedness, the delay of which may mean ruin and dishonor...
...present issue, and have taken a clearly defined stand. Whether our position is the right one cannot be decided by any contemporary tribunal, but the accusation that this stand was taken unthinkingly and by the direction of others has no support. That the CRIMSON welcomes frank and intelligent discussion among its readers is evidenced by the widely divergent views expressed in the communications during the past month. The editorial columns are at all times open for the unrestricted expression of the views of members of the University, but the CRIMSON has sufficient respect for itself as a publication to feel...