Word: bounds
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...CRIMSON, not printed because unsigned, shows a misunderstanding of the requirements and purpose of the communication column. The column is intended to open to members of the University a place for comment on subjects of timely interest. Contributions are welcomed; but all do not necessarily appear; there are bound to be some which it seems unwise to publish. All communications must be signed with their author's name as a guarantee of sincerity. The writer of the aforementioned unsigned letter protests that men, if they must affix their names to their ideas, will cease to express their ideas, through fear...
...fever as will be killed or wounded by bullets. Then there will be long marches over rough ground, and the necessity of protecting the soldier's feet. Every man who goes into the army must take good care of himself, as if he were in training. A soldier is bound in honor to keep himself in good condition, for a sick man requires two additional men, one to look after him, and one to fill his place. He had much better be at home. It is often difficult to provide pure water and food, and the men, compelled to suffer...
...good to some men in order that one may obtain one's diploma," wherewith shall it be philanthropy? If social service is to be made the equivalent of a college course, why call it social service--and, above all, why call it volunteer work? Perhaps, it is hide-bound conservatism that forces the Princetonian to take a reactionary view of this latest development of higher education spurting from the very fount of Knowledge; yet, the Princetonian is inclined to come forth with the anciently discredited dogma that to be philanthropic one must be inspired with a simon-pure love...
...member is an indication of this. The clause in the constitution permitting additional nominations to be made on petition of fifty members fails to help matters much, because the securing of fifty signatures is almost a prohibitive task. Nomination by petition should be made easier. Otherwise there is bound to be a feeling of dissatisfaction in the Union, and this will defeat its primary purpose...
Senator Henry French Hollis '92, in his address "From One Senator's View point," which he delivered in the Union yesterday evening, scored the existing conditions at Harvard in severe terms. He characterized the University as "hide-bound and conservative." Due to the conservatism, he said, "rich men who find thing rigged about right for their money-making operations are glad to contribute to the colleges. Every Esstern college is eating from the hand that has robbed the pockets of the people...