Word: campaign
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Harvard Flying Corps, received by Dr. Seabury W. Allen '91, 20 Charles River square, Boston, will be used generally "for starting an aviation school for training military aviators" and not, as was previously announced in the CRIMSON, "only to purchase the actual service equipment of the corps." An active campaign to interest graduates in the Harvard Clubs of the country in making such contributions has already begun...
...CRIMSON has throughout the entire campaign for the swimming pool co-operated with the Union authorities in securing plans to overcome all objections of those who opposed the plan. The original intention was to have a tank in that part of the basement of the Union left vacant by the removal of tthe CRIMSON to its new quarters. Owing to the fact that arguments were put forth which maintained that a swimming pool in that location would be injurious to the building as well as to people who lived continually in the resulting damp atmosphere and that no sunlight could...
...military movement at Dartmouth has lately met with considerable opposition. A new organization, known as the Independence League, composed of some fifty undergraduates, is expressing its disapproval of introducing a military course into the regular college curriculum, and will begin the opposition campaign by taking a census of the undergraduates of the college upon the question of the introduction of military drill into the curriculum, hoping, thereby, to obtain sufficient data to make an intelligent report to the faculty committee that is investigating the matter. Each undergraduate will be presented with a blank which he will be asked to fill...
...Gallishaw '16, one of the survivors of Gallipoli, will speak on his adventures during the campaign in the Dardanelles, at a dinner at the Speakers' Club this evening at 6.30 o'clock...
...Bradford of the Medical School writes today, has been raised in prestige and attractiveness. Ten years ago the practice of medicine was flooded by members of ill-prepared medical graduates; and the profession was forced to take matters in its own hands. Through the American Medical Association a publicity campaign was undertaken, which drove the incomplete school out of existence and raised the standard of the profession to its modern status. The Association required at first that medical students should have a college degree; but this was unsatisfactory, on account of the varied significance of degrees from different colleges. Under...