Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...single course is not, and cannot be, the true unit in education. The real unit is the student. He is the only thing in education that is an end in itself." These words from President Lowell's report which the CRIMSON prints in a supplement today, epitomize the reasons for the various guidances and restrictions which have been and are being thrown around the student in his choice and prosecution of courses. The new elective system has been followed by a tutorial system in the Division of History, Government, and Economics, and by the requirement of some supervision...
Members of the Regiment are advised to attend the lectures, but they will not be considered members of the course and cannot count it for their Degree unless they fulfil the requirements stated above. Arrangements will be made, if possible, for such members of the Regiment as may desire it, to attend the Tactical Walks, but no certainty of this can be given at present...
...only do the faun and Bacchus sport upon the cover, but also there is keen sincerity in the written work. If the contributors are almost always conscious in their pose and if sometimes the strain is over-obvious, this is no fault of theirs: in our world sanity cannot be unconscious...
...sure, the social advantages of the Union can often be obtained even more fully at other clubs. But the Library cannot be duplicated. It has been said to be the best selected collection of books for the "youthful cultivated reader" in America; and the number who use the library show that that is not a contradiction in terms. There is no "red tape" connected with its mechanism. The reader can browse around the shelves at pleasure, can pick out books personally and enjoy them in quiet, while smoking the Union's cigarettes. With the possible exception of that...
...cent of the manning details of the coast defences of Manila and Subig Bay and with a mobile force of a little over 7,000 American troops, supplemented by less than 6,000 Philippine Scouts, is manifestly impossible; that the great water-way of the Panama Canal cannot be protected against the operations of a first-class military power by the present or proposed garrison we contemplate placing there without the power and ability to reinforce it rapidly by troops from the United, States, is equally manifest; that we can retain our valuable Territory of Alaska in its isolated position...