Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Alumnae want to know," the letter states, "Whether it is true that there has been a 'reign of terror' on the campus and whether, as has been said, twenty-six other girls have disappeared." Denying categorically that the college is a hot bed of radicalism, atheism, and immorality, the bulletin says further, "It is apparent that current magazines and daily papers are at present subjecting all colleges to sharp and often undeserved criticism, and that Smith has seemed to come in for a particularly heavy share." The charge of immorality which is mentioned, is the outcome of the country wide...
...that such a quiet period will give the less serious student his first real acquaintance with scholarship and a taste for study that he does not get when under the forcing system of daily required work. At Harvard they do not yet know how this will result. The Harvard Bulletin is satisfied, however, that thus far--halfway through the experiment--there are no sins of languor about the Yard, of sudden golden harvests for the tutoring schools, or increase in outside activities or absences. It thinks that everybody is "harder at work than when classes are in operation," that...
...list of commentators on the decay of the CRIMSON now is to be added the name of one of the paper's own presidents. W. I. Nichola '26, Assistant Dean of the University, who in an open letter to the Editor of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin expresses his views on the subject...
...following extract dealing with the teaching of English in the University is printed by permission of The Alumni Bulletin, in the current issue of which the entire article appears in the form of a letter to the editors by Osborne Earle...
Below are excerpts from an address made by Professor Manley O. Hudson, Bemls Professor of International Law, to students in Phillips Brooks House. It is taken in part from the current issue of the Alumni Bulletin...