Word: benefiting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Putnam '25, who has just returned home to Boston after a year spent in the wilds of equatorial Africa, where he has been studying the life and customs of the negroes. "And so I'm not at all sure that the entrance of civilization into the jungle will benefit them...
...roar of the ventilating apparatus in the upper lecturer room and the Library is so loud as to prove a distraction in the latter and even to drown out a low-voiced lecturer in the former, while the air in the upstairs room seems to benefit not at all from the uproar when a large course such as Fine Arts 9a is in session...
...Brooks House, a group of Australian boys, now touring the United States and Canada, will be entertained at dinner at 7.30 o'clock. Speakers for the evening include Winslow Carlton '29, A. E. French '29, and R. A. Stout '29, who will outline undergraduate life at Harvard for the benefit of the guests...
Tomorrow evening the corps will be entertained at the Phillips Brooks House at dinner at 7 o'clock. The speakers for the evening will be A. E. French '29, Winslow Carlton '29, and R. A. Stout '29, who will outline undergraduate life in the University for the benefit of the guests. Thursday, scattered groups of students will visit the objects of interest in the University as well as the more historical spots of Cambridge...
Under the present system, your column is merely the expression of the ideas of a very small group, and but slightly expresses the prevalent opinions of the University. As a result, the scope of the CRIMSON is narrowed and no one derives any great benefit from reading what is printed. If you should exclude all but the comments of the University at large, not only would more people find interest in the editorial column, but Harvard would be provided with a true criterion of undergraduate thought. A. W. Baldwin...