Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...leave Cambridge for the vacation, and all candidates for a degree, must return all books borrowed from the College Library on or before Monday, June 28. Books left in College rooms are inaccessible after College closes and rapidly accumulate fines when they have become due. The Library cannot notify students individually in advance because it has no means of knowing who are to remain in Cambridge after Commencement and who are going away...
...called upon to keep Cambridge awake the greater part of the night. Disturbances of this sort have become more and more common until the office has laid down the law, and several men have had to fill the unwelcome role of public examples. The undergraduates must realize that they cannot break the law with impunity, and if they care to run the risk, they must put up with heavy punishment...
...CRIMSON believes that the least beneficial form of this written work is the weekly conference paper, used in many of the larger courses. It cannot pretend to be an adequate test of the student's knowledge from its short length, and in many courses it is never considered seriously by the members of the class. If oral questioning were substituted, a great deal of good would be done. The preparation for the lecture would have to be more thorough, there could be no unfairness, and the men could not help getting more out of the courses than they...
...addition to the meetings mentioned there was a barbecue at the Country Club this afternoon. But the striking feature of the whole meeting was the perfectly unanimous sense of approval, by all present, of President Lowell in every particular. This fact cannot but have impressed itself on his mind and will doubtless be a great inspiration to him just at this time when there are pressing upon him the responsibilities of the great office to which he has been elected
...been said by members of former graduating classes that the Senior picnic was one of the most enjoyable features of the life of the class. We cannot vouch for the truth of this statement, but it would seem that this occasion, if participated in by the majority of the Seniors, could be made vastly entertaining. It is the one time of a college career that a class ventures en masse to the sea-shore to disport itself to the best of its ability for a whole day. Let not the occasion be made a failure by the absence...